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THE POETICAL WORKS OF 

EDWARD ROWLAND SILL 

ipoui^cl^olti CDition 

WITH ILLUSTRATIONS 




BOSTON AND NEW YORK 
HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY 



c ) "[ r 



MOUNT PLEASANT BRANCH T J^5I 



COrVRICIlT, 1887, lS?9, 1S99, 190a, AND 1906, BY HOI.-GHT0N, MITLIN & CO. 
COPYRIGHT, 1915 AND I917, BY BLIZABETH N. SILL 



ALL '<1GHTS RESERVED 



TRANSFER 
O. O, PUBLIC LIBJtAET 
SflPT. 10, 1940 



PUBLISHERS' NOTE 

The first attempt to gather Mr. Sill's poems into a sin- 
gle volume was made in 1902, when Messrs. Hough- 
ton, Mifflin and Company issued a limited edition, 
combining the three small volumes previously pub- 
lished by them, and adding a few pieces never before 
collected. The compiler of that edition, Mr. William 
Belmont Parker, has also edited the present Household 
Edition^ and has here arranged all the poems as nearly 
as possible in their chronological order. This new and 
more satisfactory grouping has prevented his making 
full use of the group titles that have become familiar 
to Mr. Sill's readers, but he has retained them as far 
as the conditions permit. The kind cooperation of 
Mrs. Sill, and of other surviving friends of the poet, 
has also made it possible to enlarge the collection 
materially, so that it contains all of his poetical writ- 
ings that it is thought desirable to preserve. 

Boston, September, 1906. 



CONTENTS 



UNDERGRADUATE AND EARLY POEMS 

The Polar Sea . 
Morning .... 
Midnight .... 
Faith .... 

Music ..... 
Dream-Doomed . 
Despair and Hope 
Commencement Poem 

Retrospect 

Discontent . 

The Fountain . 

Solitude 
The Four Pictures 

POEMS WRITTEN BETWEEN 1862 

The Ruby Heart : a Child's Story 

To Child Anna . 

A Fable : to Child Anna 
'^The Creation 

The First Cause 

Semele ..... 

Class Song : 1864 

The Game of Life 

Man, the Spirit 
The Future 
The Dead President 



AND 1867 



Page 
I 
3 
S 
8 

9 
iz 
16 
18 
22 
26 
27 
28 
30 

33 
37 
39 
43 
44 
46 

49 
50 
52 
58 
61 



CONTENTS 



A Paraoox 


66 


Home ........ 


67 


The Choice ........ 


70 


Wisdom and Fame ...... 


7« 


Serenity ....... 


73 


THE HERMITAGE, AND OTHER POEMS 




The Hermitage ...... 


74 


* Sundown ....... 


109 


The Arch 


1 10 


April in Oakland ..... 


I 1 I 


To Child Sara ...... 


114 


Eastern Winter ...... 


»>7 


Sleeping ........ 


119 


Starlight ...... 


liO 


;A Dead Bird in Winter .... 


I 22 


Spring Twilight ..... 


124 


Evening .... ... 


125 


The Organ ....... 


127 


Lost Love 


129 


A Memory ....... 


131 


L Life 


133 


I Fertility ....... 


13 + 


Three Songs 


135 


The World's Secret .... 


136 


Seeming and Being ...... 


138 


Weather-Bound ..... 


140 


Summer Afternoon ...... 


142 


A Poet's Apology 


1+4 


A Prayer ....... 


>45 




146 


Influences ....... 


147 


POEMS WRITTEN BETWEEN 1867 AND 1873 




A Bird's Song ...... 


148 



CONTENTS 



IX 



The News-Girl 

The House and the Heart. 

A Prayer for Peace 

A Tropical Morning at Sea 

The Picture of the World 

For the Gifts of the Spirit 

The Two Ways 

The Clocks of Gnoster-Town 

The Lost Bird 

Summer Rain 

The Bellows-Boy 

The New Year . 

The Truant 

Spring .... 

Tranquillity . 

In a Far Country 

The Wonderful Thought 

To "the Radical" . 

The Invisible . 

A Drifting Cloud 

A Reply .... 

The School-House Windows 

A Foolish Wish . . 

The Secret 

POEMS WRITTEN BETWEEN 

The Things that will not Die 
A Child and a Star . 
Reverie . . ... 

Is It Safe ? ... 

Five Lives . . * . 

/ The Open Window 
Good News 
Sunday .... 



?2 AND 



i8$ 



149 

153 

154 

157 

159 

160 

162 

176 

178 

179 

i8z 

186 

188 

190 

19Z 

193 

196 

198 

201 

202 - 

204 

212 

214/ 



216 
219 
221 

222 
224 
227 
229 
232 



CONTENTS 



Peace .... 

Dare You ? . 

Christmas in California . 

But for Him 

Nature and Her Child . 

The Foster-Mother . 

The Links of Chance 

Two Views of It 
L^ To A Face at a Concert 

The Thrush 

Every-Day Life 

At Last .... 

Forest Home . 

The Singer's Confession 

A Myth of Fantasy and First Love 

The Departure of the Pilot . 

An Answer .... 

In Memory of a Musician . 

A Dream within a Dream 

A Resting-Place . 

The Mystery . 
/'''The Fool's Prayer 
I^'Opportunity 

An Aspiration 

The North Wind 

The Tree of my Life. 

The Deserter . 

A Californian's Dreams 



233 
»34 
236 
Z40 
242 

»43 

244 

»4S 
246 

^47 
248 
249 
250 
*53 
*5S 
258 

. 262 

. 265 
267 

. 272 
^74 

. 17S 
»77 
278 
282 

. 284 
286 

. 287 



THE VENUS OF MILO, AND OTHER POEMS 

The Venus of Milo ..... 290 

Field Notes ....... 297 

California Winter 3°7 



CONTENTS 



XI 



The Lover's Song 


. 


• 309 


Recall ..... 


. 


310 


/^ The Reformer . . . , 


. 


. 311 


Desire of Sleep 


. 


3" 


Eve's Daughter . . . , 


. 


• 314 


A Hymn of Hope . 


. 


315 


An Ancient Error 


. 


. 318 


An Adage from the Orient , 


. 


320 


To A Maid Demure 


. 


. 321 


Hermione ..... 


. 


32Z 


I. The Lost Magic 


. 


. 322 


n. Influences 


. 


•* 3M 


HL The Dead Letter . 




• 323 


IV. The Song in the Night 


. 


324 


i^ Truth at Last . . . . 


. 


. 325 


Untimely Thought . 


. 


326 


/- Service ... 




. 327 


On a Picture of Mt. Shasta by 


Keith . 


. 328 


.-^" Quem Metui Moritura?" 


. 


• 331 


The Singer .... 




332 


Wordsworth . . . . 




• 334 


The World runs Round 


. 


336 


Carpe Diem ... 




• 340 


Among the Redwoods 




341 


l^ At Dawn . . . . . 


. 


• 344 


Her Face 




345 


LATER POEMS 






A Morning Thought . 


. 


• 346 


Strange ..... 


. ■ 


347 


Moods ...... 


. 


. 348 


.^ The Book of Hours 


. 


349 


"Words, Words, Words" 


, 


• 350 



CONTENTS 





Four Sonnets from Sully Prudhomme 






Siesta ....... 


35* 




The Cloud 


353 




In Separation ...... 


353 




L' Amour Assassine ..... 


354 




My Peace Thou art (after Schubert's «« Du bist mcin 






Ruh'") 


355 




Mir aus den Aucen (from a Polish song of Chopin) 


356 




The Oracle 


357 




Tempted ........ 


359 




Force 


360 




Infirmity . 


362 




Her Explanation ..... 


364. 


•.-' 


Warning . 


365 




At Early Morn ...... 


366 


:^- 


Summer Night ..... 


367 




His Neighbor as Himself . 


368 


u 


Night and Peace ...... 


369 




The Philosopher 


370 




His Lost Day ....... 


371 




Fulfillment ...... 


373 




The Return to Arcadia .... 


375 




The Blotted Page ..... 


380 


u- 


Living ........ 


381 




Blindfold ....... 


382 




Wiegenlied ....... 


384 




Sibylline Bartering ..... 


38s 




The Agile Sonneteer ..... 


386 




Momentous Words ..... 


387 




The Crickets in the Fields .... 


388 




Alone ........ 


389 




Before Sunrise in Winter .... 


39' 




Illusion 


392 



CONTENTS 



xiu 



The Poet's Political Economy 

A Subtlety . 

The Difference 

A Song in the Afternoon 

A Supplication 

Space .... 

One Touch of Nature 

The Coup de Grace . 

Appreciated 

Roland 

Cloud Tracery 

The Life Natural 

To the Unknown Soul 

Reproof in Love . 

Even There 

On Second Thought . 
INDEX OF FIRST LINES 
INDEX OF TITLES 



393 
394 
395 
396 

398 

399 

400 
402 
403 
404 
407 
408 
409 
410 
411 
412 

415 
420 



LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS 

PAGE 

Edward Rowland Sill (^Photogravure^ Frontispiece 
House where Sill was born, Windsor, Conn., 

J84' 32 

San Francisco Bay, California ... 74 

Gleams now and then a pool so smooth and clear . 84 

A BRIGHT hilltop IN THE BREEZY AIR . . . 232 

The WHITE EARTH-SPIRIT, ShASTa! . . . 328 

Among the redwoods . . . , .341 



BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH 

Edward Rowland Sill was born at Windsor, Con- 
necticut, April 29, 1 84 1, and died at Cleveland, Ohio, 
February 27, 1887. The forty-six years of his life 
furnish a record of quiet, modest service, unbroken by 
striking incident or conspicuous action. Teaching was 
his profession, though he did not at once adopt it. 
There was a period after his graduation from Yale, in 
1 86 1, when he was quite uncertain of his life work. 
He spent some years in California at various forms of 
business. Then, for a time, he attended the Divinity 
School at Harvard. Later, for a year, he tried the ex- 
periment of writing for a living. But in 1868 he 
determined upon teaching, and gave to it the best of 
his remaining years. He began characteristically at 
the bottom, taking a district school at Wadsworth, 
Ohio, later teaching at Cuyahoga Falls and at Oak- 
land, California, and in 1874 he accepted the chair of 
English Literature at the University of California, 
where he taught until failing health put an end to his 
teaching, in 1882. He was happily married in 1867 
to his cousin, Elizabeth Sill, who survives him. They 
had no children, which, perhaps, left him more com- 
pletely free to devote himself, as he was fond of do- 



xviu BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH 

ing, to his students, who treasure his memory with 
an unusual and tender regard. 

From his undergraduate years he had been writing, 
chiefly in verse, and contributing in a casual wav to 
various periodicals, but keeping his authorship rigor- 
ously subordinate to his teaching. He was accus- 
tomed to say that he was " a teacher who occasionally 
wrote verses," and there was no affectation in his 
modesty ; for he seldom cared to sign his poems, but 
sent them out either unsigned or signed only by a 
nam de plume. Gradually, however, his work began to 
gain recognition and increasing attention. It had been 
done so quietly that few realized how considerable in 
amount it was. In fact it was not until after his death 
that anvthmg like an appraisal could be made of it, 
and most of his readers will probably be surprised to 
find his work so extensive as is indicated bv this 
volume. 

7^he body of Sill's work has three stages — the first 
marked by the angry rhetoric and unrestrained melody 
of his " Class Poem," the piece entitled " Music," 
and the poem of his first California period, "Summer 
Afternoon," with its soft assonances which suggest the 
influence of Mrs. Browning. The work of this period 
is worth reading chiefly as showing the course of Sill's 
development. To it belong practically the whole of 
the first \olume, "The Hermitage and Other Poems," 
published in 1868. 

The second period covers the years from iSbj to 



BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH xix 

1880, including almost all the years of his teaching 
service. The poems of this period seem to have lost 
the sensuousness of the earlier time, and not yet to 
have gained the clear tone and firm texture of the 
later period. They are more subjective, more austere, 
and at times suggest the schoolmaster. Some are 
frankly pedagogic in tone and substance, as " The 
Schoolhouse Windows," " The Clocks of Gnoster- 
Town," and " Berkeley Greets New Haven." Among 
them are the keenest poems of irony, " Fantasy and 
First Love," " The Tree of my Life " and " Five 
Lives." To this period belong also two or three of 
the strongest poems of ethical impulse that he wrote. 
The best known of all his poems, " The Fool's 
Prayer," of which Professor Royce has made such 
impressive use in the concluding chapter of "The 
Spirit of Modern Philosophy," was first published in 
"The Atlantic Monthly" for April, 1879, and the 
other poem which is so often coupled with it, " Op- 
portunity," appeared in " The Californian " in No- 
vember, 1880. 

"Five Lives" and "The Fool's Prayer" are the 
two poems which, perhaps, best sum up the two 
tendencies of Sill's mind during the middle period, 
the time of crystallization of his philosophy of life. 
They show his keen sense of unwelcome truth, on 
the biological and the moral side; his courageous ac- 
ceptance of it and his scornful rejection of subterfuges, 
which he put forcibly in "Truth at Last." 



XX BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH 

The third and closing period of Sill's work was all 
too short. It began with his return from California 
to Ohio, in 1883, and ended with his most regrettable 
death, in 1887. It was a period of rapid maturing, 
both in thought and craftsmanship. He did not enter 
new fields. He had no new message, but he gave 
the old message without uncertainty or wavering or 
confusion. Now that it came clear and plain the 
message was perceived to be Emersonian, Arnoldian, 
if you please, Tennysonian, perhaps. At any rate all 
three strains were in the music. But it was sung by 
a new voice, — a voice that gained steadily in flexi- 
bility, in timbre, and in tone. Now for the first time 
the singer learned to use its full range. For the first 
time he ventured into humor and delicate irony and 
graceful raillery. To this period belong " iMomentous 
Words," " The Agile Sonneteer," " The Poet's Polit- 
ical Economy," and " A Subtlety," all tinged with 
irony, to be sure, but all lighted with genuine humor. 
As he went on he touched the life-long themes more 
firmly and more confidently. His message was aKvavs 
ethical : work, fear not, trust God, hope evermore 
and believe ; but it gained in grace and persuasiveness. 
There remained an undertone of wistfulness, but it 
was merged in confident faith, so that " A Second 
Thought," — which seems to have been the last poem 
he wrote — faces the future with a front as brave as 
Browning's " Prospice." 

Most of his poems were not published in book form 



BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH xxi 

until after his death, but two volumes appeared in his 
lifetime. "The Hermitage and Other Poems" was 
published by Leypoldt and Holt in 1868, and "The 
Venus of Milo and Other Poems " was privately 
printed at Berkeley, California, in 1883. Following 
his death there were published by Houghton, Mifflin 
and Company " Poems " in 1887, "The Hermitage 
and Later Poems" in 1889, and " Hermione and 
Other Poems" in 1900. In 1900 there also appeared 
under the imprint of Houghton, Mifflin and Company 
a volume of prose selections taken chiefly from his 
contributions to the " Atlantic," and entitled " The 
Prose of Edward Rowland Sill." No life of Sill has 
yet been published, though the Memorial Volume 
privately printed at Berkeley, California, contains an 
account of his life, accompanied by a number of his 
letters. 



UNDERGRADUATE AND 
EARLY POEMS 

THE POLAR SEA 

At the North, far away, 
Rolls a great sea for aye. 
Silently, awfully. 
Round it on every hand 
Ice-towers majestic stand, 
Guarding this silent sea 
Grimly, invincibly. 
Never there man hath been, 
Who hath come back again, 
Telling to ears of men 
What is this sea within. 
Under the starlight, 
Rippling the moonlight. 
Drinking the sunlight. 
Desolate, never heard nor seen, 
Beating forever it hath been. 

From our life far away 

Roll the dark waves, for aye. 



THE POLAR SEA 

Of an Eternity, 

Silently, awfully. 1 

Round it on every hand j 

Death's icy barriers stand, ' 

Guarding this silent sea 

Grimly, invincibly. i 

Never there man hath been 

Who could return again, 

Telling to mortal ken 

What is within the sea 

Of that Eternity. 

I 
Terrible is our life — ] 

In its whole blood-written history | 

Only a feverish strife ; •: 

In its beginning, a mystery — I 

In its wild ending, an agony. \ 

Terrible is our death — 

Black-hanging cloud over Life's setting sun, 

Darkness of night when the daylight is done. 

In the shadow of that cloud. 

Deep within that darkness' shroud. 

Rolls the ever-throbbing sea j I 

And we — all we — \ 

Are drifting rapidly i 

And floating silently 

Into that unknown sea — J 

Into Eternity. 



MORNING 

I ENTERED once, at break of day, 

A chapel, lichen-stained and gray. 

Where a congregation dozed and heard 

An old monk read from a written Word. 

No light through the window-panes could pass. 

For shutters were closed on the rich stained-glass ; 

And in a gloom like the nether night 

The monk read on by a taper's light. 

Ghostly with shadows, that shrank and grew 

As the dim light flared, were aisle and pew ; 

And the congregation that dozed around 

Listened without a stir or sound — 

Save one, who rose with wistful face. 

And shifted a shutter from its place. 

Then light flashed in like a flashing gem — 

For dawn had come unknown to them — 

And a slender beam, like a lance of gold. 

Shot to the crimson curtain-fold. 

Over the bended head of him 

Who pored and pored by the taper dim ; 

And it kindled over his wrinkled brow 

Such words : " The law which was till now ; " 

And I wondered that, under that morning ray, 

When night and shadow were scattered away, 



MORNING 

The monk should bow his locks of white 
By a taper's feebly flickering light — 
Should pore, and pore, and never seem 
To notice the golden morning-beam. 



MIDNIGHT ' 

Under the stars, across whose patient eyes 

The wind is brushing flecks of filmy cloud, 

I wait for kindly night to hush and calm 

The wrangling throng of cares and discontents. 

The tangled troubles of a feverish brain. 

From far-off church-towers, distance-muffled bells 

Are slowly tolling dying midnight's age. 

A surging wind sighs through the shadowy trees, 

Like surf that breaks on an invisible beach, 

And sends a spray of whispers on the air, 

I hear the rushing of the wings of Time 

Sweep by me. Voices of the murmuring Past 

Chant a low dirge above my kneeling heart. 

I hear — or is it only the wild wind 

Telling its ghostly dreams to the dark trees ? — 

Amid its pauses, as irresolute 

And purposeless it gropes in fitful gusts 

Throughout the darkness, sounds of years ago. 

Sometimes it seems the rustle of a step. 

Which made my heart beat in those years ago — 

Which makes me weep to listen for it now ; 

' The editor has retained this poem as illustrating Sill's early manner, in 
spite of the fact that several lines from it reappear unchanged in later 
poems; see pp. 95, 125, 126. 



MIDNIGHT 

Sometimes a little foolish whispered phrase, 

That you would smile at, if one uttered it — 

At which I smiled even as I treasured it ; 

A warm breath brushing lightly by my check — 

A low-toned fragment of a sad old song — 

I almost think them real, so crazed am I, 

Till the shrill wind whirls them in scorn away. 

And shrieks its laughter far into the gloom. 

Oh, brooding night! thou mockest so bitterly 

With thy wild visions and thy weird-winged wind, 

That I could well believe thee all unreal. 

And our whole world only a phantasy, 

And we far-slanted shadows of some life 

That walks between our planet and its God. 

Oh, stars of Heaven ! will ye not comfort me ? 

Voices of brother-men from long ago. 

Come up to me, clasped in the leaves of books, 

That tell how they too dreamed the dream of life. 

And how, over Earth's flitting phantom forms 

Ye shone serene and steadfast as to-night. 

Unseal, unseal the secret, for whose hour 

Ye wait in hushed and breathless watchfulness 

Till God reveal the mystery of His will. 

Is it not time to tell us why we live ? 

So many years we sleep, and wake, and sleep. 

While — like some Magian through the mysteries 

Leading in fear the blindfold neophyte — 

Time leads us dimly on, till angrily 

Tired life would turn and throttle its stern guide. 



MIDNIGHT 7 

Till he should tell us whither and how long. 
But Time gives back no answer, and the stars 
Burn on, cold, hushed, and changeless as before. 
And we go back baffled and stolidly 
To the old, weary, hollow-hearted world ; 
To the old, endless search for life in death — 
The restless, hopeless roanming after rest. 



FAITH 

The tree-top, high above the barren field, 
Rising beyond the night's gray folds of mist, 

Rests stirlcss where the upper air is sealed 
To perfect silence, by the faint moon kiss'd. 

But the low branches, drooping to the ground, 
Swav to and fro, as sways funereal plume. 

While from their restless depths low whispers sound : 
" We fear, we fear the darkness and the gloom ; 
Dim forms beneath us pass and reappear, 
And mournful tongues are menacing us here." 

Then from the topmost bough falls calm reply : 
" Hush, hush ! I see the coming of the morn ; 

Swiftly the silent Night is passing by, 
And in her bosom rosy Dawn is borne. 
*T is but your own dim shadows that ye see, 
'T is but your own low moans that trouble ye." 

So Life stands, with a twilight world around ; 
Faith turned serenely to the steadfast sky. 
Still answering the heart that sweeps the ground. 
Sobbing in fear, and tossing restlessly — 

" Hush, hush ! The Dawn breaks o'er the Eastern 
sea, 

'T is but thine own dim shadow troubling thee." 



MUSIC 

The little rim of moon hangs low — the room 
Is saintly with the presence of Night, 
And Silence broods with knitted brows around. 
The woven lilies of the velvet floor 
Blend with the roses in the dusky light, 
Which shows twin pictures glimmering from the walls; 
Here, a mailed group kneels by the rocky sea — 
There, a gray desert, and a well, and palms ; 
While the faint perfume of a violet, 
Vague as a dream of Spring, pervades the air. 
Where the moon gleams along the organ-front, 
The crooked shadow of a dead branch stirs 
Like ghostly fingers gliding through a tune. 

Now rises one with faintly rustling robes, 
And white hands search among the glistening keys. 
Out of the silence sounds are forming — tones 
That seem to come from infinite distances, — 
Soft trebles fluttering down like snowy doves 
Just dipping their swift wings in the deep bass 
That crumbles downward like a crumbling wave ; 
And out of those low-gathering harmonies 
A voice arises, tangled in their maze. 
Then soaring up exultantly alone. 
While the accompaniment wails and complains. 



10 MUSIC 

— I am upon the seashore. 'T is the sound 
Of ocean, surging on against the land. 
That throbbing thunder is the roar of surf 
Beaten and broken on the frothy rocks. 
Those whispering trebles are the plashing waves 
That ripple up the smooth sand's slope, and kiss 
The tinkling shells with coy lips, quick withdrawn ; 
And over all, the solitary voice 

Is the wind wandering on its endless quest. 

— A change comes, in a crash of minor chords. 
I am a dreamer, waking from his dream 

Into the life to which our life is sleep. 
My soul is floating — floating, till afar 
The round Earth rolls, v/ith fleece of moonlit 

cloud, 
A globe of amber, gleaming as it goes. 
Deep in some hollow cavern of the sky 
All human life is pleading to its God. 
Still the accompaniment wails and complains; — 
A wild confusion of entangled chords, 
Revenge, and fear, and strong men's agony. 
The shrill cry of despair, the slow, deep swell 
Of Time's long effort, sinking but to swell, 
While woman's lonely love, and childhood's faith 
Go wandering with soft whispers hand in hand. 
Suddenly from the ages one pure soul 
Is singled out to plead before the Throne ; 
And then again the solitary voice 
Peals up among the stars from the great throng, 



MUSIC II 

Catching from out the storm all love, all hope, 
All loveliness of life, and utters it. 

Then the hushed music sobs itself to sleep. 
And all is still, — save the reluctant sigh 
That tells the wakening from immortal dreams. 



DREAM-DOOMED 

A MAID upon the lonely beach, 
All in the silent, summer day, 
With wide blue eyes fixed far away. 

And small hands clinging each to each. 

All day she wanders by the sea ; — 
What are the ways of men to her, 
Whose soul is busy with the stir 

Of never-resting memory? 

For there had glanced a passing gleam 
Of love all hopeless on her way. 
And life's up-springing April day 

God's hand had darkened with a dream. 

The mist floats on the desert's face, 
And lake and isle all lustrous moulds, - 
But when withdrawn its billowy folds, 

How bare and desolate the place ! 

Why should she live ? The life above 
Can scarce be sadder than her own ; 
But shall she die ? For death alone 

Can still the fluttering wing of love. 



DREAM-DOOMED 13 

When darkness on the ocean hangs, 
She hears the loud surf tumbling in. 
The loose stones jostling with a din 

Like wild beast clashing-to his fangs. 

Under the leaden morning sky, 

She sees from off the toppling comb 
The mad wind snatching flecks of foam 

To whirl them wildly drifting by. 

And when, as daylight disappears. 

The large moon upward moveth slow, 
It seems to waver, shrink, and grow, 

Trembling through such a mist of tears. 

But when the evening zephyrs blow 

A music borne from off the sea. 

She mingles with the melody 
A plaintive song, all soft and low. 



Calmly the night comes down on all the land, 
Faintly the twilight glimmers o'er the sea. 

Sadly the lingering ripples kiss the sand. 
So sad I pace the beach and wait for thee. 

Soft steal the muffled inland echoes here, 

A sound of church-bells trembles on the lea. 

So softly, muffl«»d memories meet the ear. 
And seem to mock me as I wait for thee. 



14 DREAM-DOOMED 

Solemnly still the great, calm stars glow on, 
And all the broad, fair heaven leans silently. 

While slumberous Ocean's undulous undertone 
Still whispers with me as I wait for thee. 

Upon the strand where life's loud surges beat, 
Mv footsteps follow where mv hope must be; 

The dull, long days and nights break at my feet — 
Must I forever, weeping, wait for thee? 



Low lowers the dull-eyed winter's day — 

A sullen sky the ocean mocks ; 

The surf beats bitterly the rocks, 
Which wintry years have worn away. 

Chafing within its cragged cage. 
The wave again and still again 
Leaps fiercely up its length of chain, 

To fall back foaming in its rage. 

On the wet sands, with elfish hair. 
And faded fingers tightlv clenched. 
And vest whose folds, all weather-drenched, 

Leave half her haggard bosom bare. 

She stands amid the spray, alone. 
O heavy heart ! that all thy years 
Hast held one image dim with tears, 

And watched it while it turned to stone. 



DREAM-DOOMED 15 

So wretched stands she staring there, 

As if the desert and the storm 

And bitter wind had taken form, 
And frozen into that despair. 

And looking on them thus I seem 
To understand the life undone, 
The life-long wretchedness of one 

Whose youth was withered with a dream. 



DESPAIR AND HOPE 

We sailed a cruise on a summer sea — 

I, and a skull for company : 

I in the stern our course to turn, 

And it on the prow to grin at me. 

Over the deep heaven, hung below, 

Whose imaged clouds lay white like snow, 

Glided we, as the tide might be, 

Slipping swiftly, floating slow. 
Past the woods all living green — 

Save by the marge some fading tree, 
Whose leaf, so early autumn-touched, 

Would make the skull to grin at me. 

Past a grove of fragrant pine, 
From whose dusky depths of shade 
Snowy shaft and colonnade 

Marked a ruined altar-shrine; — 

And the skull's grim face grinned into mine. 
Under the arch of a vine-clasped elm 

Leaning off from the mossy land, 
Across the shallow the idle helm 

Lightly furrowed the silver sand : 
Down the slope all clover-sweet 

Danced a group in childish glee — 



DESPAIR AND HOPE 17 

Hissed a swift snake at their feet ; — 
Then the skull grinned unto me. 

Into a cavern dim and dank 

Crept we on the creeping tide ; 
Shapeless creatures rose and sank, 

Dripped with damp the ceiling wide, 
Darker, chiller hung the air; 

Scarcely I the prow could see; 
But I, through the shadow there, 

Felt the skull still grin at me. 

Out of the cavern's thither side. 

Into a mellow, morn-like glow, 
Streams the ripple-curving tide; 

Sounds of music sweeter grow ; 
Odorous incense, softened air. 
Melodies so faint and fair. 

Thrill me through with life and love : 
And all suddenly from the prow. 
Where had seemed the skull just now. 

Flutters to my breast a dove. 



COMMENCEMENT POEM 



I 

Four years ! 
Four waves of that wide sea which rings the world 
Broken upon the shore, eternity. 
Upon whose crests, like waifs tossed by the tide, 
We neared, touched, floated side by side, and now 
Sad is their murmur on the shadowy sand, 
And sad our parting as we drift away. 



Four years ! 
Fled like the phantoms of a morning dream — 
A strange, fair dream, and now the sun has risen, 
And the day's work begun. Yet blame us not 
If, while we gird ourselves, we linger still 
Wistfully musing over what we dreamed. 

II 

O hours of Yale — vanished hours ! 
Memory, sorrowfully singing, 
Makes a far-off" sound, like ringing 
Of a chime of silver bells. 
Whose soft music sinks and swells, 



COMMENCEMENT POEM 19 

Breathed upon by a breath of flowers ; 
Fainter, sweeter fragrance bringing 
Than from odorous island-dells, 
Kissed all night by summer showers. 



Ill 



Mornings were there, richer than of Eastern story, 
When the dark, wet trunks the sun-bathed elms 
uphold, 

Bedded in the leaves whose lustrous glory 

Half was sheen of emeralds, half of lucent gold. 

Evenings when the sun set, like a king departed 
Unto other lands with revel, pomp, and light. 

While the queenly moon, deserted, pale, proud-hearted. 
Paces the still corridors of the stars all night. 

3 
Hours of golden noonday, when the blood up-leaping 

Like a soft, swift lightning pulses through the veins ; 
Hours of shrouded midnight, when the soul unsleeping 

Calm self-knowledge, wider trust, and patience gains. 

4 

Friendships truer than all woman's brittle passion, 
Love that in its fullness, even while we stand 

Here, to part, has only stammering expression, 

Dumb and half-embarrassed clinging hand to hand. 



20. COxMMENCEMENT POEM 

IV 

I 
Here at last to part — the darkness lying 

In that parting not as yet we know ; 
Like a child who sees his father dying, 

With a vague, half-wondering sense of woe. 



As, when some Beloved has departed. 

In the after years, unfelt before. 
Haunting wishes vex the heavy-hearted, — 

" Would to God that we had loved him more ! " 

3 
So we, o'er these buried years low-bending. 

Shall regret each lightest cause of pain. 
Trivial hurts in silent heartaches ending. 

Till we sigh, " Would we might live again ! " 

4 
All our foolish pride and willful blindness. 

Darkening round us like a cloud of dust. 
Careless scorn, where should have been all kindness, 

Cold suspicion in the place of trust, 

5 

Many a word we might have left unspoken. 
Many a deed that should have been undone, 

Shall reproach us from each treasured token 
With a separate sting for every one. 



COMMENCEMENT POEM 21 



When the world is heavy on our shoulders, 
And the heart is fretted with its care, — 

When the glory of ambition moulders, 

And our load seems more than we can bear, — 

7 

When the days and nights, like shuttles weaving 
In a senseless loom, pass to and fro. 

Sombre hues in faded patterns leaving 
On the woof of life that lies below. 



Through the dim, long years old forms will glimmer. 
Ghostly lips will haunt us with their tone. 

Kind eyes will look forth, and seem the dimmer 
For the memories brimming in their own. 

9 

We go forth, like children in the morning 
Scattering to spend the summer hours, — 

Some their brows with laurel wreaths adorning. 
Some to saunter through a field of flowers ; 



One to lose his way, and wander, straying. 
Till the twilight, frighted and alone, — 

One, it may be, weary with his playing. 
Wending home his footsteps ere the noon. 



22 COMMENCEMENT POEM 

1 1 

But whatever fate to us is given, 

All, when day is done, again shall meet, 

And at night-fall, 'neath the stars of heaven, 
Shall be gathered at our Father's feet. 



RETROSPECT 

Not all which we have been 

Do we remain. 
Nor on the dial-hearts of men 

Do the years mark themselves in vain ; 
But every cloud that in our sky hath passed, 
Some gloom or glory hath upon us cast ; 
And there have fallen from us, as we traveled, 

Many a burden of an ancient pain — 
Many a tangled cord hath been unraveled, 

Never to bind our foolish hearts again. 
Old loves have left us, lingeringly and slow, 
As melts away the distant strain of low 
Sweet music — waking us from troubled dreams. 
Lulling to holier ones — that dies afar 
On the deep night, as if by silver beams 
Claspt to the trembling breast of some charmed star. 
And we have stood and watched, all wistfully. 
While fluttering hopes have died out of our lives. 
As one who follows with a straining eye 
A bird that far, far-ofF fades in the sky. 



COMMENCEMENT POEM 23 

A little rocking speck — now lost — and still he 

strives 
A moment to recover it — in vain, 
Then slowly turns back to his work again. 
But loves and hopes have left us in their place, 
Thank God ! a gentle grace, 
A patience, a belief in His good time. 
Worth more than all earth's joys to which we climb. 

VI 

The pleasant path of youth that we have ranged 
Ends here ; as children we lie down this even, 
But while we sleep there is a stir in heaven — 

A hundred guardian angels have been changed. 

Those of our childhood gently have departed 
With its pure record, writ on lilies, sealed ; 

And in their place stand spirits sterner-hearted. 
To grave our manhood on a brazen shield. 

VII 

I 

Well, the world is before us, — let us go forth and 
live, 
God's fair stars overhead, and the breath of God 

within, 
Steadfast as we may amid the whirl and the din ; 
Let us challenge the fates, — what answer do they 
give ? 



24 COMMENCEMENT POEM 

s 
Work, work, work ! 
All action is noble and grand — 
Whirling the wheel or tilling the land. 
In the honest blows of the brawny hand 
Is the kingliest crown of living won : 
Work, work, work ! 

3 

Ah ! but the hollowness will lurk 
Under the shell of all that is done. 

Where is the labor so noble and great, 
Among all vanities under the sun ? 

What is the grandeur of serving a state. 
Whose tail is stinging its head to death like a scorpion ? 
To simper over a counter, to lie for a piece of coin, 

To be shrewd and cunning, to cheat and steal. 

Business-like and mercantile, — 
An army of rats and foxes — who will join ? 
Each little busy brain forever at work 

Webbing out its mite of a plan. 
Each hypocritical face with smile and smirk, 

Thinking to mask its spleen from another man • 
And then the apish mummery 
Of the thing they call Society ! 
And its poor, sour fools that smiling stand, 

With a smile that is overdone, — 
With a hand that graspeth each man's hand. 

And a heart that loveth none. 



COMMENCEMENT POEM 25 

And the mills and shops whose dull routine 1 
Turns God's image to a machine : 

Oh ! it makes one proud of our civilization — ' 

Proud of a place in the noble nation, ' 

Where a human soul — J 

A human soul — ' 

Passes the years as they onward roll, j 

Making a million of heads for pins, or a thousand i 

knives ; 

Such are the miracles men call lives ! j 

4 ' 

No wonder, when the future is forgot, " 
If earth, and man, and all that being brings, 
Seem but a blank, unmeaning blot, 
That God has scattered, writing higher things, 
And the soul, poor ghost ! 
So bitterly, bitterly tempest-tost. 
So. base and cowardly doth lie, 
That it would give — 
Ah ! gladly give — 
All this life that it dare not live, 
To shun the death it dare not die. 

Life — poor thing — that wastes its painful breath, ; 

And walks the road that the fates have given. 
Tossing its fettered hands to heaven, 

Like an ironed criminal struggling and praying his ' 

way to death ! j 



26 COMMENCEMENT POEM 

5 

DISCONTENT 

Oh, that one could arise and flee 

Unto blue-eved Italy, 

Far from mechanical clank and hum ! 

There to sit bv the sighing sea, 

And to dream of the days that shall be — shall be — 

And the glorv of years to come. 

Or on some far ocean-isle, 

Under the palm and the cocoa-tree, 

To build of the coral boughs a home, — 

Or floating and falling adown the Nile, 

To drown one's cares in the deeps of Time 

And the desert's brooding mystery. 

Yet howsoever we plot or plan. 

In every age — through every clime — 

Still the littleness of man 

Would follow us, fast as we might flee : 

And the wrangling world break in on whatever is 

tender and sweet, 
As on a beautiful tune the rattling and noise of the 

street. 

6 

Oh, the world — the world ! 
Mockery — knavery — cheat ; 
Down at your angry feet 
Let the lying thing be hurled : 



COMMENCEMENT POEM 27 

Worth no sorrowful tear or sob. 

Worth not even a sigh ; 

But the scorn which a murdered purpose hurls on a 

butchering mob, — 
Which the pale, dead lips of a truth smile back on a 

conquering lie. 

VIII 

THE FOUNTAIN 

Were it not horrible ? 
After all the dreams we dream. 

Our yearnings and our prayers, 
If this " I " were but a stream 
Of thoughts, sensations, joys, and pains. 
Which being clogged, no soul remains; 
Even as the fountain seems to be 
A shape of one identity. 
But only is a stream of drops, 
And when the swift succession stops, 
The fountain melts and disappears. 
Leaving no trace but scattered tears. 
Yet even here, O foolish heart. 
Thou wert not cheated of thy part j 
Were it not better, even here, 
To keep thy current pure and clear. 
With pearly drops of dew to wet 
The amaranth and violet, 



28 COMMENCEMENT POEM 

And round thy crystal feet to shower 
Blessings and beauty every hour — 
Better than in a sullen flow 
To creep along the ground, and go 
Wasting and sinking through the sand, 
To make no single spot of land 
Happier or holier for thy being — 
Refresh no flower, no grass-blade, seeing 
Thou wert not always thus to stand ? 



IX 



SOLITUDE 

All alone — alone. 

Calm, as on a kingly throne. 

Take thy place in the crowded land, 

Self-centred in free self-command. 

Let thy manhood leave behind 

The narrow ways of the lesser mind: 

What to thee are its little cares. 

The feeble love or the spite it bears ? 

Let the noisy crowd go by — 

In thy lonely watch on high, 

Far from the chattering tongues of men^ 

Sitting above their call or ken. 

Free from links of manner and form 

Thou shalt learn of the winged storm — • 

God shall speak to thee out of the sky. 



COMMENCEMENT POEM 29 

X 

Well — well. 

Why need the hurrying brain to trouble itself? 

Threescore years is swiftly worn away — 

In some summer when our heads are gray, 

We perhaps shall wander back from our power or 

pelf. 
To muse on the days when all these things befell. 
Nothing will then be changed : 
Calm as of yore through the slumberous summer 

noon 
Will the Old Rock rest in its majesty ; 
All the paths that we have ranged 
Still will wear the glory of their June, — 
Nothing changed but we. 

The years will bring us, hastening to their goal, 
A little more of calmness, and of trust. 
With still the old, old doubt of death and dust. 
And still the expectancy within the soul. 
O Father, as we go to meet the years. 
We ask not joy that fame or pleasure brings. 
But some calm knowledge of the sum of things — 
A hint of glory glimmering over tears ; 
That he, who walks with sanction from Thy hand. 
Some token of its presence may have seen. 
Beneath which we may tread the path serene 
Into the stillness of the unknown land. 



THE FOUR PICTURES 

A GROUP of artists of the olden time 
Met in a studio. One was gray and bent, 
With beard like snow against his doublet black; 
Three younger, one with glowing olive cheek, 
One with a drowsy glitter in deep eyes, 
One lean, and full of quick heat-lightning ways, — 
You could not guess if he were old or young. 
For his face hid the marks of other lives 
Long gone, and so belied his stripling form. 

Around were half-done pictures : eyes begun, 
Gleams of white flesh from sombre shadows dim, 
A velvet mantle tossed upon a stool, 
A lute, a leaning rapier, vases tall. 
And thro' thin, taper glasses glimmered wine. 

Suddenly spake the restless one: " Enough 
Of dabbled flowers, and bits of landscape bland ; 
Let us each paint the world as 't is to him. 
Here are my pencils and mv canvas, — come ! " 
Then from a curious cabinet he drew 
A flask, vine-etched, and held it to the sun. 
Till the gold was molten thro' it : " This to him 
Whose sketch is best — but who shall be the judge?" 



THE FOUR PICTURES 31 

« That sweet slim maid who sat to you last week," 
Answered the graybeard, " and who comes to-day, 
You said, with ducats for the finished work." 

So till the sunset's level pencil lay 
Flame red on bust and antique furniture, 
Their slender fingers dextrous went and came 
'Twixt color and canvas ; then they turned and saw. 

Snowbeard had sketched a sullen close of day j 
A flat and windy beach ; a flying leaf 
Whirled at haphazard over toward the foam. 

And Drowsy-eyes had hung a pipe in air. 
Broken mid-stem, whose tip was lost in cloud, 
And from its bowl a bubble floated up. 
Which was the earth, with land and mimic seas. 

And Olive-cheek had made far overhead 
A gorge of blue in the sky, with cliffs of cloud 
Rounded, and white as salt, and in between 
A headlong fallen angel plunging down. 

But Restless-face most lovingly had drawn 
The slim sweet maid who was to be their judge. 
Looking with such unearthly deeps of eyes 
Into your very soul, you dare not love — 
You dare not even dream how fair they were. 
Lest they should flash upon your dream with scorn. 



32 THE FOUR PICTURES 

And as they looked, lo ! she herself had come. 
Quietly then the others stole away. 
With friendly mischief in their nod and smile, 
Leaving those two alone. From silken mesh 
She drew the broad gold pieces, that betrayed 
Her trembling touch in tinklings musical. 
But he : "I give you all the world I have, — 
I ask but what is all the world to me." 
And answering not, with tender eyes cast down. 
She left in his her little, warm, white hand. 



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HOUSE WHERE SILL WAS BORN, WINDSOR, CONN., 1841 



POEMS WRITTEN BETWEEN 

1862 AND 1867 

THE RUBY HEART 

A child's story 

Under a fragrant blossom-bell 
A tiny Fairy once did dwell. 
The moss was bright about her feet, 
Her little face was fair and sweet, 
Her form in rainbow hues was clad, 
And yet the Fairy's soul was sad ; 
For, of the Elves that round her moved, 
And in the yellow moonlight roved, 
There was no Spirit that she loved. 

Many a one there was, I ween, 
Among the sprites that danced the green, 
Whose hands were warm to clasp her own, 
And voices kindly in their tone ; 
But love the fondest and the best 
Awaked no answer in her breast : 
Her heart unmoved within her slept — 
And, " I can never love ! " she wept. 



34 THE RUBY HEART 

She taught herself a quaint old song 
And crooned it over all day long : 



^^■He praytth best^ who loveth best 
All things both great and small ; 
for the dear God who lox'eth us. 
He made and loveth all." 

" But I," she said, "can never pray. 
Nor to His mansions find the way, 
For he will suffer not, I know, 
A creature unto Him to go 
Who has not loved His world below." 

Slow-wandering by the brook alone. 
She chose a pure white pebble-stone, 
And carved it, sitting there apart, 
Into a little marble heart; 
She hung it bv her mossv bed — 
" My heart will never love," she said, 
" Till this white stone turn ruby-red." 

One night a moonbeam smote her face 
And wakened her, and in its place 
There stood an angel, full of grace. 
" Dear child," he said, " from far above 
I come to teach thee how to love. 
Do every day some little deed 
Of kindness, some faint creature feed. 



THE RUBY HEART 35 

Make some hurt spirit cease to bleed, 
Then carve the record fair, at night. 
Upon thy heart of marble white. 
Each word shall turn to ruby-red. 
And so much of thy task be sped; — 
For when the whole is ruddied o'er. 
Thy bosom shall be cold no more ; 
The souls thy careless thoughts contemn 
Shall win thee by thy deeds to them" 

Upon the sorrowful Fairy broke 
Like sudden sunshine this new hope. 
Each day to some one's door she took 
A kindly act, or word, or look, 
Whose record, fairly carved at night. 
Blushed out upon the stony white ; 
Till, somehow, wondrously there grew 
More grace in every one she knew — 
Each little ugliness concealed. 
Each goodness more and more revealed,— 
As, when you watch the twilight through, 
The sky seems one pure empty blue. 
Till, o'er the paling sunset bars. 
Suddenly 't is one sweep of stars ! 

So day by day she found herself 
Grow kindlier to each little elf: 
Yea, even to the birds and bees. 
And slender flowerets round her knees j 



36 THE RUBY HEART 

The very moss-buds at her feet 

She came with warmer smile to greet, 

Till now, at last, her marble heart 

Was ruddy, save one little part 

That gleamed all snowy as of old 

In the still moonbeams, white and cold. 

Her task was almost done — she knelt, 
And hid her glad wet eyes, and felt 
Her soul's first prayer steal up to God, 
Like Spring's first violet from the sod. 
Through all her being softly stole 
Such joy of gratitude, her soul 
Brimmed over like a brimming cup — 
And then a voice said, " Child, look up ! " 
And lo ! the stone above her head 
Was a pure ruby, starry-red ; 
And down among the flowers there flew. 
Brushing aside the moonlit dew, 
A little snowy elfin dove. 
And nestled on her breast, to prove 
Sweet trust in one whose heart was love. 



TO CHILD ANNA 

As in the Spring, ere any flowers have come, 

A vague and blossomy smell 
Pervades the woods, all odors mixed in one. 
As if to tell 

That they are mustering in each sunny dell, 

So round your childish form there seems to cling 

A sense of nameless grace, 
A sweet confusion — budding hints of Spring 
Just giving place 

To graver woman-shadows in your face. 

I see no longer the mere child you are — 

The woman you might be 
Stands in your place, with eyes that gaze afar : 
Her face I see, 

And it is very beautiful to me. 

The little soft white hands you lay in mine 

I touch with reverent care ; 
I see them wrinkled into many a line, 
But fair — more fair 

For every weary deed they do and bear. 



38 TO CHILD ANNA 

The fresh young mouth, all careless purity, 

Has faded from my gaze, 
And all the tender looks, which charity 
And many patient days 

Leave round the lips, seem now to take its place. 

Therefore I stroke so tenderly your head, 

Or watch your steps afar, 
Praying that God His love on you will shed — 
More faithful far 

Than our blind human love and watching are. 



A FABLE 

TO CHILD ANNA 

One morning, in a Prince's park, 
Before the rising of the lark 
Or the first glimmering twilight beam, 
A Lily blossomed by a stream ; 
Just at the chillest, darkest hour, 
When frowning clouds in heaven lower. 
When shadows crouch all gaunt and grim. 
And every little star is dim. 

" O dreary world ! " the Lily sighed : 
Only the dreary wind replied. 

Soon, in the East uprising slow, 
A cold gray dawn began to grow. 
The Lily watched where all around 
The mist came creeping o'er the ground. 
And listened, while with sadder tone 
The morning-wind began to moan : 
But all the more the light drew on. 
Her tear-dewed cheek was deathlier wan, — 
Each streak of daylight, as it grew. 
Revealed a world so strange and new. 
Slowly the dawn crept up the sky 
Like a cold, cruel, watching eye. 



40 A FABLE 

Once from some little wakened bird 
A twittering note of joy she heard : 
The chill dew fell upon her head — 
She almost wished that she were dead ; 

'' There comes no joy for me," she said. 
A gnarled and wisdom-wrinkled Oak 
Which overheard, in answer spoke : 

" O foolish little Lilybell, 
Why do you weep, when all is well ? 
Look up ! Have faith ! For by and by 
The sun is coming up the sky ; 
All golden red the heavens will glow, 
All golden green the earth below ; 
The birds their rippling songs will sing, 
And wooing winds their spices bring : 
And then the Prince will hither come 
To wander 'mid his flowers, and some 
(Ah, favored blossoms !), bending down, 
He plucks and places in his crown. 
Look up, O foolish Lilybell ! 
A little while, and all is well." 

The Lily drooped and trembled still : 

"The dawn," she sobbed, " is dim and chill 
And if the Prince should come, alas ! 
He will not stoop among the grass j 
I surely cannot please his eyes. 
For I am neither fair nor wise : 
He '11 choose some tall and stately tree. 
He surely will not care for me ! " 



A FABLE 41 

But now the sunrise was at hand. 
Lighting with splendor all the land j 
As if a seraph stood below 
With lifted pinions all aglow, 
Whose tips of fire still nearer canie 
In feathery plumes of floating flame ; 
While from his hidden face the rays 
Shot up and set the heavens ablaze. 
They warmed the old Oak's wrinkled face. 
And touched it with a mellow grace ; 
Then dancing downward to his feet 
They kissed the Lily's face so sweet. 
And laughed away her foolish fear 
And lit a gem in every tear ; 
Then flew to greet the Master's eye, 
Who even now was drawing nigh. 

He saw the Lily's fragile cup 
With dew and sunlight brimming up. 
And, as he marked each beauty well. 
The petals pure as pearliest shell. 
And on the lowly bending stem 
The tear-drop sparkling like a gem. 
The Prince was glad, and stooping down 
Plucked it, and set it in his crown ; 
And 'mid the jewels glittering there 
None shone so royally and rare, 
For none was half so pure and fair. 

Dear child, 't is our ingratitude. 
And faithless fear, and sullen mood, 



42 A FABLE 

Darken a world so bright and good! 
There's nothing beautiful and true — 
There 's not a rift of heaven's blue, 
And not a flower, or dancing leaf. 
But shames our selfish-hearted grief. 
His hand that feels the sparrow's fall. 
And builds the bee his castle-wall. 
And spreads the tiniest insect's sail, 
And tints the violet's purple veil, 
Will never let His children stray 
Or wander from His arms away. 
To-day may seem all cold and dim — 
Trust the To-niorrow unto Him. 
'T is slander that we often hear, 
" Hope whispers falsehoods in our ear," — 
There 's no such lying voice as Fear. 
Hope is a prophet sent from Heaven, 
Fear is a false and croaking raven. 
The dawn that buds all gray and cold 
Will blossom to a sky of gold ; 
God's love shall like a sunrise stay 
To lighten all the future way — 
Still brighter to the Perfect Day, 



THE CREATION 

A Fountain rusheth upward from God's throne ; 
Its streaming stem we name Eternal Power : 
Its tossing drops are worlds, that spin and fall, 
While on their spheres our little human lives 
Like gleams and shadows swiftly glance and ga 



THE FIRST CAUSE 

Doubtless the linnet, shut within its cage, 
Thinks the fair child that loves it, brings it seed, 
And hangs it, chirping to it, in the sun, 
Is the preserver of its little world. 

Doubtless the child, within her nursery walls, 
Thinks her kind father is the father of all 
Those happy children, chattering on the lawn — 
Keeps yonder town as well as this bright room. 
And pours the brook that sparkles past the door. 

Doubtless we think the Being who made man, 
The visible world, space powdered thick with stars. 
The golden fruit whose core is curious life. 
Created all things — love, and law, and death; 
Fate, the crowned forehead ; Will, the sceptred hand. 

Perchance — perchance: yet need it be that He 
Who planted us is the Head-gardener ? What 
If beyond Him rose rank on rank, as the bulb 
Is higher than the crystals of its food. 
And he who sets it, higher than the flower. 
And he that owns the garden, more than all ? 

The great Cause works through lesser ones ; permits 
The plant to bear dead buds on dying stems ; 
The beaver to weave dams that the stream snaps ; 
The workman to make watches that lose time, 



THE FIRST CAUSE 45 

Or organ pipes all jarred and out of tune. 
Did not I build a playhouse for my boys, 
And made it ill, and that loose plank fell down 
And hurt the children ? And did not I learn, 
After three trials, how to make it well ? 
Know we the limit of the power He gives 
To lesser Wills to will imperfectly ? 
Is earth that limit f Is the last link man, 
Between the finite and the infinite ? 
When that new star flared out in heaven, and died, 
Who knows what Spirit, failing in his plan. 
Dashed out his work in wrath, to try anew ? 
O mother world ! we stammer at thy knee 
Vainly our childish questions. 'T is enough 
For such as we to know, that on His throne, 
Nearer than we can think, and farther ofF 
Than any mind can fathom, sits the One, 
And sees to it — though pain and evil come, 
And all may not be good — that all is well. 



SEMELE 

What were the garden-bowers of Thebes to 
me ? 
What cared I for their dances and their feasts, 
Whose heart awaited an immortal doom ? 
The Greek youths mocked me, since I shunned in 

scorn 
Them and their praises of mv brows and hair. 
The light girls pointed after me, who turned 
Soul-sick from their unending fooleries. 
Apollo's noon-glare wrathfully beat down 
Upon the head that would not bend to him — 
Him in his fuming anger! — as the highest. 
In every lily's cup a venomous thing 
Crooked up its hairy limbs; or, if I bent 
To pluck a blue-eyed blossom in the grass, 
Some squatted horror leered with motionless eyes. 

I think the very earth did hate my feet. 
And put forth thistles to them, since I loathed 
Her bare brown bosom ; and the scowling pines 
Menaced me with dark arms, and hissed their threats 
Behind me, hurrying through their gloom, to watch 
(Blurred in unsteady tears till all their beams 
Dazzled, and shrank, and grew) that oval ring 
Of shining points that rift the Milky Way, 



SEMELE 47 

Revealing, through their gap in the dusted fire, 
The hollow awfulness of night beyond. 



There came a change : a glory fell to me. 
Na more 't was Semele, the lonely girl. 
But Jupiter's Beloved, Semele. 
With human arms the god came clasping me : 
New life streamed from his presence ; and a voice 
That scarce could curb itself to the smooth Greek 
Now and anon swept forth in those deep nights. 
Thrilling my flesh with awe ; mysterious words — 
I knew not what ; hints of unearthly things 
That I had felt on solemn summer noons. 
When sleeping earth dreamed music, and the heart 
Went crooning a low song it could not learn. 
But wandered over it, as one who gropes 
For a forgotten chord upon a lyre. 



Yea, Jupiter ! But why this mortal guise. 
Wooing as if he were a milk-faced boy ? 
Did I lack lovers ? Was my beauty dulled, 
The golden hair turned dross, the lithe limbs shrunk. 
The deathless longings tamed, that I should seethe 
My soul in love like any shepherd girl ? 

One night he sware to grant whate'er I asked ; 
And straight I cried, " To know thee as thou art ! 
To hold thee on my heart as Juno does ! 



48 SEMELE 

Come in thv thunder — kill mc with one fierce 
Divine embrace! Thine oath! — Now, Earth, at 
last ! " 



The heavens shot one swift sheet of lurid flame : 
The world crashed : from, a body scathed and torn 
The soul leapt through, and found his breast, and died. 

"Died?" — So the Theban maidens think, and 
laugh. 
Saving, " She had her wish, that Semele ! " 
But sitting here upon Olympus' height 
I look down, through that oval ring of stars, 
And see the far-off Earth, a twinkling speck — 
Dust-mote whirled up from the Sun's chariot-wheel — 
And pity their small hearts that hold a man 
As if he were a god ; or know the god — 
Or dare to know him — only as a man ! 
— O human love, art thou forever blind ? 



CLASS SONG 

1864 

As through the noon the reapers rest, 
Till sinks the sun adown the west, 
From morning toil an hour we come 
To dream beneath the trees of home. 

O gentle elms, within your shade 
Ye keep the vows that we have made : 
Your bending boughs, in tender tone, 
Are whispering still of Sixty-One. 

Like drowsy murmurs of the noon. 
Our noisy futures melt in tune. 
And all the past, like ocean shell. 
Still echoing, sighs — farewell, farewell ! 

Pure as the evening's pearly star. 
And sweet as songs that float afar. 
Our olden love comes back to-night, 
In music soft, and starry light. 

O summer wind, on pinions strong. 
Waft to the absent ones our song ; 
And tell them, wander as they will. 
We love them still, — we love them still ! 



THE GAME OF LIFE 

We are living a game of chess, dear May — 

For the prixe of the Better Life we play. 

The wonderful world is our chequered board, 

And our hearts the box where the pieces are stored. 
The evil one has ever been 
Our foe, and uses our faults for men. 

There 's the Black King Fear and the Black Queen 
Pride 

With her bishops Envy and Spite beside, 

And his knights are Alalice and Deceit ^ 

His castles Stubbornness and Hate^ 

And for pawns each little idle sin, 

That trusts to its smallness to creep, creeps in. 

But on our side the white King, //^/V/, 

And the white Queen Love^ march conquering still. 

Her bishops are Honor and Purity^ 

Her knights are Kindness and Charity^ 

And for castles staunch and strong and fair. 

Courage and Constancy are there. 

And the little pawns to be given away 

Are our little kindly acts each day. 

Sometimes a wily foe is met 

And the wavering will is sore beset ; 



THE GAME OF LIFE 51 

But we do not fight quite all alone — 

There comes a quiet whispered tone, 

An unseen touch that seems to fall 

In answer to the faintest call, 

And lifts our fingers tired and lame. 

And points the move that wins the game. 

In dazzling day or blinding night 

God ne'er forgets us in the fight j 

His glorious angels will abide 

If we but clasp them at our side; 

The hand that beckons them is Prayer, 

And Faith the clasp that holds them therCc 



MAN, THE SPIRIT 

A SMALL, swift planet, glimmering round a star, — 
A molten drop with thinnest crusted shell 
Of lime and flint, roofed-in with azure air, — 
A winding stair of life, from Trilobite 
And Saurian up to one who walks their king. 
Drawing the lime and flint up through themselves 
And kindling them to spirit, till on him, 
\Vhose limbs are clay, there flames a lambent crown 
Of fire from heaven, — these make our world. 

What then 
Is this wild creature, wandering up and down. 
Seeking a thousand things, but keeping still 
A thought of God in his heart ? Why is he here. 
Feet in the sod and thoughts among the stars. 
Bewildered for some watchword or command, 
As a battalion wavering on the field 
Without a leader ? In the march of worlds 
Is Earth alone forgotten ? 

Who are we. 
Clustered to-day with eyes and hands that clasp 
As by some secret oath of brotherhood. 
Out of the mass that jostles to and fro 



MAN, THE SPIRIT 53 

Forever, without aim or hope ? We are pledged 

To UNDERSTAND, to live the truth we know, 

And help men so to live and understand. 

A handful 'gainst a host, we make our stand, 

Nailing this thesis on the golden gate 

Of the new Mammon-temples — that the souls — 

The striving, praying, hoping, human souls — 

Alone on earth are valuable — their end 

To will God's will, because their will belongs 

To him, the maker and the giver, so 

Dilating to the broader destiny 

Whose shadowy gateway opens from our world. 

Out of the wrinkled bosom of the Old, 
New England once was born ; a rock-hewn race, 
Puritan pilgrims, splendidly pure and grim. 
Flint-set against all sham, they rose to say 
'T was sunrise and the ghosts must vanish now 
Before the living Fact : that a king's crowned head 
Was but a man's head, and it must come off 
Like any beggar's, when it wrought a wrong. 
They freed society, the individual man 
We must emancipate ; they stripped all masks. 
And knocked the fool's-caps off the venerable heads 
Of church and state, and tore their pompous robes 
To strings for children to fly kites with. 

Here 
Upon a coast whose calmer-blossoming surf 
Beats not with such an iron clang as theirs, 



54 MAN, THE SPIRIT 

We plant the Newer England ; this our word, 

That man is no mere spider-like machine 

To spin out webs of railroads after him 

In all earth's corners, nor a crafty brain 

Made to knit cunning nets of politics 

Or sharpen down to insignificance 

On the grinding wheels of business, but a Soul, 

That travelling higher worlds in upper light 

Dips down through bodily contact into this ; 

As a hand trails over a boat's side through the 

waves. 
And seems to the sea-creatures, eyed alone 
For their own element, a thing of the sea. 
^Vhether he wear the purple or the serge. 
Whether he worship under frescoed pomp 
Or bare-hewn rafters, it is still the man. 
The individual spirit, something far 
Beyond earth's chemistry, to whom all else 
Are only foot-lights, scene, accessory, 
Or nothing — or a farce, a mockery. 

In this fair land, whose fields lie robed in bloom, 
A living poem bound in blue and gold. 
With azure flowers like little flecks of sky 
Fallen, tangled in the dew-drops, to the grass, 
And orange ones — as if the wealth below 
Had blossomed up in beaten flakes of gold ; 
Where all the baser elements of earth. 
Aspiring up through root, and stalk, and leaf, 



MAN, THE SPIRIT 55 

Stand stretching delicate petal-wings toward heaven. 

Poised on their slender feet for flying ; here 

Nature, like amorous Cleopatra, plots 

To hold her Caesar, brimming every sense 

With perfume, song, and gorgeous coloring. 

Throws softly wooing winds about his neck. 

With sparkling air (as tho' not pearls alone. 

But diamonds were dissolved in it), still fires 

His brain to seek new dalliance, fresh delight. 

Forgetful of his throne beyond the Sea. 

Content with the golden Present, now, they say, 

We must pore in the past no longer ; our old books. 

And antique, moss-grown system must give way 

To the new patent methods for the mind ; 

New patent lives to lead, with no more dreams 

And superstitions, only practical work. 

A callow-winged philosophy breaks shell 

And cackles prematurely loud that we 

Are mummied, gone behind the times ; no more 

Dead languages, nor cloister-life — the lore 

That will not take the harness for their use. 

To weave, or grind, or burrow-out the mine. 

Smells mouldy to their noses — Sophomores, 

And parvenus of the intellectual world ! 

Who would brush down from heaven the olden 

stars. 
To set new, self-adjusting spangles there. 
Would mow the everlasting mountains off. 
And build up straight, right-angled ones instead. 



56 MAN, THE SPIRIT 

What is our training — what do colleges give j 

To men, which makes that feared and sneered-at| 
thing, I 

A culture through the classics ? Do we dare | 

Reveal the Eleusinian mysteries I 

Which leave such impress on these white boy-brows,l 
That the world, recognizing kingship, says, 
" Here is a soul that knows itself, has touched ' 

The centre, and radiates the broadening beams 
Of influence straight to the point he means" ? 
We cannot, if we would, tell all ; we hold 
Some things there are that never can be told. 

Articulate speech is but a coarse-woven sieve 
That drops the fine gold through ; some subtile chords 
Of swift and ravishing music lurk between 
The written notes. This only we can tell : i 

The boy, clear-eyed and beautiful-browed, is led 
To a quiet spot arched over by great trees, I 

And this seal set upon him, — for four years 
Sacred from all the tarnishing touch of men; j 

Shut from the jangling of the brazen bells I 

That strike the hours of the Present noisily, 
He is bid to listen — and along the years 
Float up the echoes of the Past, the world's I 

Birth-songs and marching-music, requiems and prayers.; 
He learns the languages that we call " dead 
(The onlv living ones, whose fire still glows 
Beneath the ash of every modern tongue). 



MAN, THE SPIRIT 57 

The scrolls that men have dabbled with heart's blood, 

Blotted with tears, are his, to learn that all 

Is accident and flying form except the soul. 

The outer husk, the crown, the robes, or rags 

Signify nothing ; Roman, Greek, and Goth, 

Ate, slept, and dreamed, and died, like modern men. 

The audible word is nothing — if the lips 

Prayed Zeus or Allah, Elohim or Lord, 

The heart said still the same. He learns to choose 

The changeless from the changing, as sole good. 

Only the trivial chafF is fanned away, 

As Time's broad wings go sweeping over earth. 

The futile acquisitions of to-day 

Tempt him but little, so the heart grow full 

With inner force and outward-burning fire. 

No surface buckling-on of glittering facts 

His mind would have, but weapons that can make 

The sinewy arm to wield them ; for the sword 

And shield will moulder, but the sinewy arm 

Has many a field to fight beyond this earth. 

Stretched under some cathedral-roof of elm, 
Frescoed in flickering sunlights, with far eyes 
That watch and do not see the summer sky — 
A cloudy opal, veined as when a wave 
Leaps up, and breaks, and leaves the milk-white 

foam 
Streaking its meshes over the blue sea — 
Flat to the ground, where he can seem to feel 



58 MAN, THE SPIRIT 

The great earth heave beneath him like a ship 

Plunging its course along the tideless space, 

He whispers with his heart in thoughts like these 



THE FUTURE 

What may we take into the vast Forever ? 

That marble door 
Admits no fruit of all our long endeavor, 

No fame-wreathed crown we wore, 

No garnered lore. 

What can we bear beyond the unknown portal ? 

No gold, no gains 
Of all our toiling, in the life immortal 

No hoarded wealth remains, 

Nor gilds, nor stains. 

Naked from out that far abyss behind us 

We entered here : 
No word came with our coming to remind us 

What wondrous world was near, 

No hope, no fear. 

Into the silent, starless Night before us, 

Naked we glide : 
No hand has mapped the constellations o'er us. 

No comrade at our side, 

No chart, no guide. 



MAN, THE SPIRIT 59 

Yet fearless toward that midnight, black and hollow, 

Our footsteps fare: 
The beckoning of a father's hand we follow. 

His love alone is there. 

No curse, no care. 



And so we learn our world, finding how time 
Is an illusion — the perspective all 
But a mere trick of shadow, which can make 
That misty peak seem far beyond the hill 
In the foreground — touch it, and you see 
'T is all one whole : The Greek stands at our side. 
Toga and sandals shielding the same flesh 
That coat and shoes do now, the same hot brain 
Throbbing beneath the helmet as the hat. 
As one who hums a tune about his work, 
And hears a friend's voice from another room 
Strike in an alto, so we hear afar 
The sound of voices all along the past 
Chording with ours. 'T was only yesterday 
That Plato stood and talked with Socrates ; 
'T was last night Paul was here, and on the desk 
He left his letters, which the air has turned 
From parchment into paper for our use. 
In the next room they wait ; 't is but a step 
Over the threshold to them there, yet since 
The shadow of the tree of life lies dark 
Across the doorway, like a faltering child 



6o MAN, THE SPIRIT 

We dread the passage through the cold dark hall, 
To where the Father calls, and they have gone. 

What is the visible, tangible world all worth. 
Except for symbols, somewhat coarse and large, 
Like the raised letters for the blind to feel ? 
The shadowy domes serenely lifted up, 
The soundless depths that deepen down in thought, 
Make one small world draw dwindling to a point. 
The little earth ! Think, that the same bright sun, 
Which rises there from the familiar hill 
And laughs its level joy straight to our eyes. 
Is wrapping half the globe in morning light, 
Kindling dew-diamonds on the tropic palm. 
Tipping the white gull's wing o'er Northern seas 
And striking frozen fire from the iceberg's towers 
At either pole. 

The brisk and dapper minds 
Are doubtless those which have had the practical 
And not the philosophic training, yet 
When the world wants a great man for great deeds, 
Who ever took the modern-fashioned one. 
Who had learned the useful only and eschewed 
Dead languages or dreaming in the woods ? 
The great man ever has sought the sacred fire 
From olden books, or from the older stars 
In solitudes, away from the bustling streets 
And babbling men. 



MAN, THE SPIRIT 6i 

Ah, who can speak of great 
Nor think of him who was our greatest one ? 
Let us wait here, and lay a wreath of song 
Upon our grave. 

THE DEAD PRESIDENT 

Were there no crowns on earth, 
No evergreen to weave a hero's wreath. 
That he must pass beyond the gates of death, 
Our hero, our slain hero, to be crowned ? 
Could there on our unworthy earth be found 

Naught to befit his worth ? 

The noblest soul of all ! 
When was there ever, since our Washington, 
A man so pure, so wise, so patient — one 
Who walked with this high goal alone in sight, 
To speak, to do, to sanction only Right, 

Though very heaven should fall ! 

Ah, not for him we weep ; 
What honor more could be in store for him ? 
Who would have had him linger in our dim 
And troublesome world, when his great work was done r 
Who would not leave that worn and weary one 

Gladly to go to sleep ? 

For us the stroke was just ; 
We were not worthy of that patient heart ; 



62 MAN, THE SPIRIT 

We might have helped him more, not stood apart. 
And coldly criticised his works and ways — 
Too late now, all too late — our little praise 
Sounds hollow o'er his dust. 

Be merciful, O our God ! 
Forgive the meanness of our human hearts, 
That never, till a noble soul departs. 
See half the worth, or hear the angel's wings 
Till they go rustling heavenward as he springs 

Up from the mounded sod. 

Yet what a deathless crown 
Of Northern pine and Southern orange-flower. 
For victory, and the land's new bridal hour. 
Would we have wreathed for that beloved brow ! 
Sadly upon his sleeping forehead now 

We lay our cypress down. 

O martyred one, farewell ! 
Thou hast not left thy people quite alone. 
Out of thy beautiful life there comes a tone 
Of power, of love, of trust, a p'ophecy, 
Whose fair fulfillment all the earth shall be, 

And all the Future tell. 



Earth's greatest ones ever have gone so far 
Out on life's borderland, that they have caught 
The sound of an infinite ocean, far away, 



MAN, THE SPIRIT 63 

Rounding our island-world. But now appear 
These new philosophers, practical, well-informed, 
Assuring us there is no ocean-sound — 
'T is but the roaring in our feverish ears. 
They carry the glimmering lantern of conceit 
Swinging along their path, and see no Night, 
No fathomless, sombre glory of the dark. 
But their own shadows, that seem giant forms, 
Stalking across the fields and fences — they 
That are stumbling pygmies ! 

They will show you God 
And all his universe in a nutshell : see ! 
Pinched in our little theory like a vice. 
We cleave the nut with a keen hypothesis. 
Whisk ofF the top — there 'tis convenient 
For logical handling. " Cannot see ? " Oh, then 
You have spoiled your eyes with gazing at the sun. 
Hard, angular, and dry, they pish and pooh 
At all ideas they cannot measure off 
And pack into their iron-bound, narrow brain. 
They '11 not admit the existence of a truth 
Which cannot be expressed in x and ^, 
And solved by their quadratics. Well, they serve 
To show a new phenomenon in the world : 
That a mind, if taken in time, can be transformed 
To a machine of clockwork, cogs and wheels 
Wound up with useful facts, and set away 
On a shelf to go its narrow round of thought 



64 MAN, THE SPIRIT 

And tell us when 't is noon or supper time, 
If we get careless through abstraction. So 
All men, even these, have uses. Some to go 
Whirling around the circumference 
Spinning out sparks into the darkling space. 
While some sit staidly at the safe, slow hub 
And swear there are no radii and no rim. 
No winged steeds far at the chariot's pole, 
No Power that rides, triumphant, terrible. 
What has this new, pert century done for man. 
That it affords to sneer at all before, 
Because it rides its aimless jaunts by steam 
And blabs its trivial talk by telegraph ? 
What of it ? Are not babes born naked now, 
As ever, and go naked from the world ? 
If I am the ape's cousin, what to me 
Are steam and harnessed lightning, art and law ? 
If the night comes on so soon, what matters it 
If the short day be foul or fair — if Fate 
Rain thunderbolts or roses on our heads ? 
Yea, even 't were some satisfaction then 
To stand and take the thunderbolts, and think 
We are large enough at least to serve as marks 
For gods to hurl at. 

If there is no key. 
Why puzzle longer with the scribbled scroll 
We blur our eves on ? But, O merciful God, 
If our souls are immortal, O forgive 



MAN, THE SPIRIT 65 

That we still creep on dusty hands and knees, 

Face downward to the ground, when we might 

walk 
Erect, and face the heavens, and see thy stars ! 

We gaze from our separate windows on the Night 
And find our own small faces imaged there 
In the glass, nor ever see the shadowy plain 
Stretching out through the dimness, on and on. 

Splendid beginners, still we toil and fill 
The vestibule of our lives with useless plans, 
With noise of hammer, scaffolding and dust 
And rubbish, building some imagined fane 
To worship in through years that never come. 
For life is like the legendary bird 
The Christ-child's hands were moulding out of 

clay : 
While we are shaping it with eager care. 
We look up startled, for the bird has flown ! 

Ah, if the mind could sometimes be content 
To cease from its male madness, its desire 
To radiate outward, and in passive rest 
Receive from Nature's ever-waiting arms 
Energy, fire, and life ! We blind ourselves 
With briny sweat-drops, even more than tears. 
Ever with burning haste we scorch our souls. 
And set their compass-needles whirring round 



66 MAN, THE SPIRIT 

So they can never keenly point to the pole. 

There 's such a clash and jar kept up within, 

Hissing of nerve-steam, iron purposes 

Clanging on one another, who can hear 

The sweet, sweet silver voices from afar ? 

Ah, let a man but listen ! Have we not 

Two ears for silence, one small mouth for noise ? 

Listen until we catch the key, and know 

Our note, and then chime in — not rave and run, 

And shout our frantic orders, just as though 

We were the leader of the orchestra. 

Not little separate voices ; could we wait. 

Each in his corner, conning quietly 

His part, the chords would be the sweeter for it, 

A PARADOX 

Haste, haste, O laggard — leave thy drowsy dreams ! 
Cram all thy brain with knowledge ; clutch and 

cram ! 
The earth is wide, the universe is vast : 
Thou hast infinity to learn. Oh, haste ! 

Haste not, haste not, my soul ! " Infinity " ? 
Thou hast eternity to learn it in. 
Thy boundless lesson through the endless years 
Hath boundless leisure. Run not like a slave — 
Sit like a king, and see the ranks of worlds 
Wheel in their cycles onward to thy feet. 



MAN, THE SPIRIT 67 

HOME 

I know a spot beneath three ancient trees, 
A solitude of green and grassy shade, 

Where the tall roses, naked to the knees. 
In that deep shadow wade. 

Whose rippled coolness drips from bough to bough. 

And bathes the world's vexation from my brow. 

The gnarled limbs spring upward airy-free, 

And from their perfect arch they scarcely swerve, 

Like spouted fountains from a dark, green sea 
So beautiful they curve, — 

Motionless fountains, slumbering in mid-air. 

With spray of shadows falling everywhere. 

Here the Sun comes not like the king of day, 
To rule his own, but hesitant, afraid. 

Forbears his sceptre's golden length to lay 
Across the inviolate shade. 

And wraps the broad space like a darkened tent. 

With many a quivering shaft of splendor rent. 

Seclusion, as an island still and lone. 

Round which the ocean-world may ebb and flow, 
Unheeded, following fruitlessly the moon, 

And where the soul may go 
Naked of all its vanities and cares, 
To meet the bounteous grace that Nature bares. 



68 MAN, THE SPIRIT 

Here stretched at morn I watch the sunrise ray 

That sweeps across the earth like minstrel's hand, | 

Waking from all the birds a song of day, 
Caught up from land to land, 

And earth is beautiful and hearts are brave. 

Ere busy Life has waked to claim her slave. 

Each day a pure and velvet-petal'd flower, ' 

Blooms fresh at dawn, with trembling light be- 
dewn, 

But dull and tarnished at the mid-day hour — 
The noisy, trampling noon. 

Its beauty soiled with handling. Ever choose 

The virgin morning for the soul to use. 

The wind comes hushing, hushing through the trees I 
Like surf that breaks on an invisible beach j 

And sends a spray of whispers down the breeze. 
Whispers that seem to reach 

From some far inner land where spirits dwell. 

And hint the secret which they may not tell. 

No garrulous company is here, but books — ] 

Earth's best men taken at their best — books 

With dark-edged paths, and penciled margin-strokes, . 

Where friends have paused and mused, ' 

And here and there beneath the noticed lines, ! 

Faint zigzag marks like little trailing vines. j 



MAN, THE SPIRIT 69 

Here what to me are all the childish cares 

That make a Bedlam of the busy world ? 

Each hour that flies some quiet message bears 
Beneath its moments furled, 

Like a white dove, that, under her soft wings, 

Kind thoughts from far-ofF home and kindred brings. 

So let us live, not pent in noisy towns, 
But in calm places, watching all things fair — 
The months following in waves across the fields. 
Each stranding there new flowery pearls and shells ; 
The flocks of shadows nestled 'neath the trees ; 
The laughing brooks, like mischievous children still 
Tangling the silver thread of the motherly moon. 
So shall Earth be no more a theatre. 
In which a tragic comedy is played — 
A horrible farce with too real murder in it — 
But a fair field where till the break of day 
Man wrestles with the Angel of his fate 
For an immortal blessing. 

If we knew, 
O Father, if we knew we die not, but 
Live on, we should live worthier of thy love : 
So help thy little ones to know and live : 
That as a shadow which goes reaching forth 
Longer and longer as the sun goes down. 
The soul may stretch forth toward the great Unseen, 
Until the sacred, solemn starlight comes 
Gathering our individual shadows in its own. 



THE CHOICE 

Only so much of power each day — 

So much nerve-force brought in play ; 

If it goes for politics or trade, 

Ends gained or money made, 

You have it not for the soul and God — 

The choice is yours, to soar or plod. 

So much water in the rill : 

It may go to turn the miller's wheel. 

Or sink in the desert, or flow on free 
To brighten its banks in meadows green. 
Till broadening out, fair fields between, 

It streams to the moon-enchanted sea. 
Only so little power each day : 
Week by week days slide away ; 

Ere the life goes, what shall it be — 
A trade — a game — a mockery, 
Or the gate of a rich Eternity? 



WISDOM AND FAME 

A WILDERNESS, made awful with the night — 
Great glimmering trunks whose tops were hid in 

gloom, 
Vast columns in the blackness broken off, 
Between whose ghostly forms, slow-wandering, 
A company of lost men sought a path. 

Some groped among the dead leaves and fallen 
boughs 
For footprints ; but the rattle of the leaves 
And crook of stems seemed serpents coiled to strike 

Some took the momentary sparks that rode 
Upon their straining eyeballs, for far lights, 
And followed them. 

Some stood apart, in vain 
Searching, with horror-widened eyes, for stars. 

So, stumbling on, they circled round and round 
Through the same mazes. 

Then they singled one 
To climb a pinnacled height, and see from thence 
The landmarks, and to shout from thence their course. 
With aching sinews, bleeding feet, bruised hands, 
He gained the height ; but when they cried to him 
They got but maudlin answers, — he had found, 
Slaking hot thirst, a fruit that maddened him. 



72 WISDOM AND FAME 

Another, and another still they sent ; 
But every one that climbed found the ill fruit 
And maddened, and gave back but wild replies : 
And still in darkness they go wandering, lost. 



SERENITY 

Brook, 

Be still, — be still ! 
Midnight's arch is broken 
In thy ceaseless ripples. 
Dark and cold below them 
Runs the troubled water, — 
Only on its bosom, 
Shimmering and trembling. 
Doth the glinted star-shine 

Sparkle and cease. 

Life, 

Be still, — be still ! 

Boundless truth is shattered 

On thy hurrying current. 

Rest, with face uplifted. 

Calm, serenely quiet ; 

Drink the deathless beauty — 
Thrills of love and wonder 
. Sinking, shining, star-like; 
Till the mirrored heaven 
Hollow down within thee 
Holy deeps unfathomed. 
Where far thoughts go floating. 
And low voices wander 

Whispering peace. 



THE HERMITAGE, AND OTHER 
POEMS 

THE HERMITAGE 

California, Bay of San Francisco, 1866 

I 

A LIFE, — a common, cleanly, quiet life, 
Full of good citizenship and repute, 
New, but with promise of prosperity, — 
A well-bred, fair, young-gentlemanly life, — 
What business had a girl to bring her eyes, 
And her blonde hair, and her clear, ringing yoice, 
And break up life, as a bell breaks a dream ? 
Had Love Christ's wrath, and did this life sell doves 
In the world's temple, that Love scourged it forth 
Beyond the gates ? Within, the worshipers, — 
Without, the waste, and the hill-country, where 
The life, with smarting shoulders and stung heart, 
Unknowing that the hand which scourged could 

heal, 
Drave forth, blind, cursing, in despair to die, 
Or work its own salvation out in fear. 



THE HERMITAGE 75 

Old World — old, foolish, wicked World — fare- 
well ! 
Since the Time-angel left my soul with thee, 
Thou hast been a hard stepmother unto me. 
Now I at last rebel 

Against thy stony eyes and cruel hands. 
I will go seek in far-ofF lands 
Some quiet corner, where my years shall be 
Still as the shadow of a brooding bird 
That stirs but with her heart-beats. Far, unheard 
May wrangle on the noisy human host. 
While I will face my Life, that silent ghost. 
And force it speak what it would have with me. 

Not of the fair young Earth, 
The snow-crowned, sunny-belted globe ; 
Not of its skies, nor Twilight's purple robe, 
Nor pearly dawn ; not of the flowers' birth, 
And Autumn's forest-funerals ; not of storms, 
And quiet seas, and clouds' incessant forms ; 
Not of the sanctuary of the night. 
With its solemnities, nor any sight 
And pleasant sound of all the friendly day : 
But I am tired of what we call our lives ; 
Tired of the endless humming in the hives, — 
Sick of the bitter honey that we eat. 
And sick of cursing all the shallow cheat. 

Let me arise, and away 
To the land that guards the dying day, 



76 THE HERMITAGE 

Whose burning tear, the evening-star, 
Drops silently to the wave afar; 
The land where summers never cease 
Their sunny psalm or" light and peace. 
Whose moonlight, poured for vears untold, 
Has drifted down in dust of gold ; 
Whose morning splendors, fallen in showers. 
Leave ceaseless sunrise in the flowers. 

There I will choose some eyrie in the hills, 
Where I mav build, like a lonely bird, 
And catch the whispered music heard 
Out of the noise of human ills. 



So, I am here at last ; 
A purer world, whose feet the old, salt Past 
Washes against, and leaves it fresh and free 
As a new island risen from the sea. 

Three dreamv weeks we lay on Ocean's breast. 
Rocked asleep, bv gentle winds caressed. 
Or crooned with wild wave-lullabies to rest. 
A memory of foam and glassy spray ; 
Wa\e chasing wave, like voung sea-beasts at play ; 
Stretches of mistv silver 'neath the moon, 
And night-airs murmuring manv a quiet tune. 
Three long, delicious weeks' monotony 
Of skv, and stars, and sea. 



THE HERMITAGE 77 

Broken midway by one day's tropic scene 
Of giant plants, tangles of luminous green, 
With fiery flowers and purple fruits between. 



I have found a spot for my hermitage, — 
No dank and sunless cave, — 
I come not for a dungeon, nor a cage, — 
Not to be Nature's slave. 
But, as a weary child. 
Unto the mother's faithful arms I flee. 
And seek the sunniest footstool at her knee, 
Where I may sit beneath caresses mild. 
And hear the sweet old songs that she will sing to me. 

'T is a grassy mountain-nook, 
In a gorge, whose foaming brook 
Tumbles through from the heights above, 
Merrily leaping to the light 
From the pine-wood's haunted gloom, — 
As a romping child, 
Affrighted, from a sombre room 
Leaps to the sunshine, laughing with delight : 
Be this my home, by man's tread undefiled. 
Here sounds no voice but of the mourning dove. 
Nor harsher footsteps on the sands appear 
Than the sharp, slender hoof-marks of the deer, 
Or where the quail has left a zigzag row 
Of lightly printed stars her track to show. 



78 THE HERMITAGE 

Above me frowns a front of rocky wall, 
Deep cloven into ruined pillars tall 
And sculptures strange; bald to its dizzy edge, 
Save where, in some deep crevice of a ledge 
Buttressed by its black shadow hung below, 
A solitary pine has cleft the rock, — 
Straight as an arrow, feathered to the tip. 
As if a shaft from the moon-huntress' bow 
Had struck and grazed the clifFs defiant lip. 
And stood, still stiffly quivering with the shock. 

Beyond the gorge a slope runs half-wav up. 
With hollow curve as for a giant's cup. 
Brimming with blue pine-shadows : then in air 
The gray rock rises bare, 
Its front deep-fluted by the sculptor-storms 
In moulded columns, rounded forms. 
As if great organ-pipes were chiseled there. 
Whose anthems are the torrent's roar below. 
And chanting winds that through the pine-tops go. 
Here bursts of requiem music sink and rise. 
When the full moonlight, slowly streaming, lies 
Like panes of gold on some cathedral pave, 
While floating mists their silver incense wave. 
And from on high, through fleecy window-bars. 
Gaze down the saintly faces of the stars. 

Against the huge trunk of a storm-snapped tree, 
(Whose hollow, ready-hewn by long decay. 



THE HERMITAGE 79 

Above, a chimney, lined with slate and clay, 

Below, a broad-arched fireplace makes for me,) 

I 've built of saplings and long limbs a hut. 

The roof with lacing boughs is tightly shut. 

Thatched with thick-spreading palms of pine. 

And tangled over by a wandering vine, 

Uprooted from the woods close by. 

Whose clasping tendrils climb and twine. 

Waving their little hands on high. 

As if they loved to deck this nest of mine. 

Within, by smooth white stones from the brook's beach 

My rooms are separated, each from each. 

On yonder island-rock my table 's spread. 

Brook-ringed, that no stray, fasting ant may come 

To make himself with my wild fare at home. 

Here will I live, and here my life shall be 
Serene, still, rooted steadfastly, 
Yet pointing skyward, and its motions keep 
A rhythmic balance, as that cedar tall. 
Whose straight shaft rises from the chasm there, 
Through the blue, hollow air. 
And, measuring the dizzy deep. 
Leans its long shadow on the rock's gray wall. 



Through the sharp gap of the gorge below. 
From my mountains' feet the gaze may go 
Over a stretch of fields, broad-sunned. 
Then glance beyond. 



8o THE HERMITAGE 

Across the beautiful bav, 

To that dim ridge, a score of miles away, 

Lifting its clear-cut outline high, 

Azure with distance on the azure skv. 

Whose flocks of white clouds brooding on its crests 

Have winged from ocean to their piny nests. 

Bevond the bright blue water's further rim. 

Where waves seem ripples on its far-off brim. 

The rich voung citv lies. 

Diminished to an ant-hill's size. 

I trace its steep streets, ribbing all the hill 

Like narrow bands of steel. 

Binding the citv on the shifting sand : 

Thick-pressed between them stand 

Broad piles of buildings, pricked through here and 

there 
By a sharp steeple ; and above, the air 
Murkv with smoke and dust, that seem to show 
The bright skv saddened by the sin below. 



The voice of mv wild brook is marvelous ; 
Leaniriij above it from a jutting rock 
To watch the image of mv face, that forms 
And breaks, and forms again (as the image of God 
Is broken and re-gathered in a soul"), 
I listen to the chords that sink and swell 
From manv a little fall and babbling run. 
That hollow gurgle is the deepest bass ; 



THE HERMITAGE 8j 

Over the pebbles gush contralto tones, 
While shriller trebles tinkle merrily, 
Running, like some enchanted-fingered flute. 
Endless chromatics. 

Now it is the hum 
And roar of distant streets ; the rush of winds 
Through far-ofF forests : now the noise of rain 
Drumming the roof; the hiss of ocean-foam : 
Now the swift ripple of piano-keys 
In mad mazurkas, danced by laughing girls. 

So, night and day, the hurrying brook goes on ; 
Sometimes in noisy glee, sometimes far down. 
Silent along the bottom of the gorge. 
Like a deep passion hidden in the soul, 
That chafes in secret hunger for its sea : 
Yet not so still but that heaven finds its course j 
And not so hid but that the yearning night 
Broods over it, and feeds it with her stars. 



When earth has Eden spots like this for man. 
Why will he drag his life where lashing storms 
Whip him indoors, the petulant weather's slave ? 
There he is but a helpless, naked snail, 
Except he wear his house close at his back. 
Here the wide air builds him his palace walls, — 
Some little corner of it roofed, for sleep ; 
Or he can lie all night, bare to the sky. 



82 THE HERMITAGE 

And feel updrawn against the breast of heaven, 
Letting his thoughts stretch out among the stars, 
As the antennae of an insect grope 
Blindly for food, or as the ivy's shoots 
Clamber from cope and tower to find the light, 
And drink the electric pulses of the sun. 

As from that sun we draw the coarser fire 
That swells the veins, and builds the brain and 

bone. 
So from each star a finer influence streams. 
Kindling within the mortal chrysalis 
The first faint thrills of its new life to come. 

Here is no niggard gap of sky above. 
With murk and mist below, but all sides clear, — 
Not an inch bated from the full-swung dome ; 
Each constellation to the horizon's rim 
Keen-glittering, as if one only need 
Walk to the edge there, spread his wings, and float. 
The dark earth spurned behind, into the blue. 



I love thee, thou brown, homely, dear old Earth ! 
Those fairer planets whither fate may lead, 
Whatever marvel be their bulk or speed. 
Ringed with what splendor, belted round with fire. 
In glory of perpetual moons arrayed, 
Can ne'er give back the glow and fresh desire 
Of youth in that old home where man had birth. 



THE HERMITAGE 83 

Whose paths he trod through wholesome light and 

shade. 
Out of their silver radiance to thy dim 
And clouded orb his eye will turn, 
As an old man looks back to where he played 
About his father's hearth, and finds for him 
No splendor like the fires which there did burn. 

See : I am come to live alone with thee. 
Thou hast had many a one, grown old and worn, 
Come to thee weary and forlorn. 
Bent with the weight of human vanity. 
But I come with my life almost untried. 
In thy perpetual presence to abide. 
Teach me thy wisdom ; let me learn the flowers, 
And know the rocks and trees, 
And touch the springs of all thy hidden powers. 
Let the still gloom of thy rock-fastnesses 
Fall deep upon my spirit, till the voice 
Of brooks become familiar, and my heart rejoice 
With joy of birds and winds ; and all the hours, 
Unmaddened by the babble of vain men. 
Bring thy rnost inner converse to my ken. 
So shall it be, that, when I stand 
On that next planet's ruddy-shimmering strand, 
I shall not seem a pert and forward child 
Seeking to dabble in abstruser lore 
With alphabet unlearned, who in disgrace 
Returns, upon his primer yet to pore — 



84 THE HERMITAGE 

But those examiners, all wise and mild, 

Shall gently lead me to my place, 

As one that faithfully did trace 

These simpler earthly records o'er and o'er. 



Beckoned at sunrise by the surf's white hand, 
I have strayed down to sit upon the beach. 
And hear the oratorio of the Sea. 
On this steep, crumbling bank, where the high 

tides 
Have crunched the earth away, a crooked oak — 
A hunch-backed dwarf, whose limbs, cramped down 

by gales. 
Have twisted stiffening back upon themselves — 
Spreads me a little arbor from the sun. 

On the brown, shining beach, all ripple-carved. 
Gleams now and then a pool ; so smooth and 

clear, 
That, though I cannot see the plover there 
Pacing its farther edge (so much he looks 
The color of the sand), yet I can trace 
His image hanging in the glassy brine — 
Slim legs and rapier-beak — like silver-plate 
With such a pictured bird clean-etched upon it. 

Beyond, long curves of little shallow waves 
Creep, tremulous with ripples, to the shore. 




m. 



I 






■I", *.•-., «>dL •■^.-•* 



\ ' \\\ 













GLKAMS NOW AND THEN A FOOL SO SMOOTH AND CLEAR 



THE HERMITAGE 85 

Till the whole bay seems slowly sliding in, 
With edge of snow that melts against the sand. 

Above its twinkling blue, where ceaselessly 
The white curve of a slender arm of foam 
Is reached along the water, and withdrawn, 
A flock of sea-birds darken into specks ; 
Then whiten, as they wheel with sunlit wings. 
Winking and wavering against the sky. 

The earth for form, the sea for coloring, 
And overhead, fair daughters of the two. 
The clouds, whose curves were moulded on the hills, 
Whose tints of pearl and foam the ocean gave. 

O Sea, thou art all-beautiful, but dumb ! 
Thou hast no utterance articulate 
For human ears ; only a restless moan 
Of barren tides, that loathe the living earth 
As alien, striving towards the barren moon. 
Thou art no longer infinite to man : 
Has he not touched thy boundary-shores, and now 
Laid his electric fetters round thy feet ? 
Thy dumb moan saddens me ; let me go back 
And listen to the silence of the hills. 



At last I live alone : 
No human judgment-seats are here 



86 THK HERMITAGE 

Thrust in between man and his Maker's throne, 
VVitli praise to covet, or with frown to fear : 
No small, distorted judgments bless, or blame; 
Only to Him I own 
The inward sense of worth, or flush of shame. 

God made the man alone ; 
And all that first grand morning walked he so. 
Then was he strong and wise, till at the noon, 
When tired with jovous wonder he la}- prone 
For rest and sleep, God let him know 
The subtile sweetness that is bound in Two. 

Man rises best alone : 
Upward his thoughts stream, like the leaping flame, 
Whose base is tempest-blown ; 

Upward and skyward, since from thence they came. 
And thither they must flow. 
But when in twos we go. 

The lightnings of the brain wca\e to and fro. 
Level across the abyss that parts us all ; 
If upward, only slantwise, as we scale 
Slowly together that night-shrouued wall 
Which bounds our reason, lest our reason fail. 
If linked in threes, and fives. 
However heavenward the spirit strives. 
The lowest stature draws the highest down, — 
The king must keep the level of the clown. 
The grosser matter has the greater power 



THE HERMITAGE 87 

In all attraction ; every hour 

We slide and slip to lower scales, 

Till weary aspiration fails, 

And that keen fire which might have pierced the 

skies 
Is quenched and killed in one another's eyes. 



A child had blown a bubble fair 
That floated in the sunny air : 
A hundred rainbows danced and swung 
Upon its surface, as it hung 
In films of changing color rolled, 
Crimson, and amethyst, and gold, 
With faintest streaks of azure sheen, 
And curdling rivulets of green. 
" If so the surface shines," cried he, 
" What marvel must the centre be ! " 
He caught it — on his empty hands 
A drop of turbid water stands ! 

With men, to help the moments fly, 
I tossed the ball of talk on high, 
With glancing jest, and random stings. 
Grazing the crests of thoughts and things. 
In many a shifting ray of speech 
That shot swift sparkles, each to each. 
I thought, " Ah, could we pierce below 
To inner soul, what depths would show I " 



I 



88 THE HERMITAGE 

In friendships many, loves a few, 
I pierced the inner depths, and knew 
'T was but the shell that splendor caught : 
Within, one sour and selfish thought. 

I found a grotto, hidden in the gorge, 
Paved by the brook in rare mosaic work 
Of sand, and lucent depths, and shadow-streaks 
Veining the amber of the sun-dyed wave. 
Between two mossv masses of grav rock 
Lay a clear basin, which, with sun and shade 
Bewitched, a great transparent opal made. 
Over whose broken rims the water ran. 
Above each rocky side leaned waving trees 
Whose lace of branches wove a restless roof. 
Trailed over bv green vines that sifted down 
A dust of sunshine through the chilly shade. 

Leaning against a trunk of oak, rock-wedged. 
Whose writhen roots were clenched upon the stones, 
I was a Greek, and caught the sudden flash 
Of a scared Dryad's vanishing robe, and heard 
The laughter, half-suppressed, of hiding Fauns. 
Up the dark stairway of the tumbling stream 
The sun shot through, and struck each foamy fall 
Into a silvery veil of dazzling fire. 
Along its shady course, the tossing drops 
By some swift sunbeam ever caught, were lit 
To sparkling stars, that fell, and flashed, and fell. 



THE HERMITAGE 89 

Incessantly rekindled. Bubble-troops 
Came dancing by, to break just at my feet ; 
Lo ! every bubble mirrored the whole scene — 
The streak of blue between the roofing-boughs, 
And on it my own face in miniature 
Quaintly distorted, as if some small elf 
Peered up at me beneath his glassy dome. 



If men but knew the mazes of the brain 
And all its crowded pictures, they would need 
No Louvre or Vatican : behind our brows 
Intricate galleries are built, whose walls 
Are rich with all the splendors of a life. 
Each crimson leaf of every autumn walk, 
Dewdrops of childhood's mornings, every scene 
From any window where we 've chanced to stand, 
Forgotten sunsets, summer afternoons. 
Hang fresh in those immortal galleries. 
Few ever can unlock them, till great Death 
Unrolls our lifelong memory as a scroll. 
One key is solitude, and silence one, 
And one a quiet mind, content to rest 
In God's sufficiency, and take His world, 
Not dabbling all the Master's work to death 
With our small interference. God is God. 

Yet we must give the children leave to use 
Our garden-tools, though they spoil tool and plant 



90 THE HERMITAGE 

In learning. So the Master may not scorn 
Our awkwardness, as with these bungling hands 
We try to uproot the ill, and plant with good 
Life's barren soil : the child is learning use. 
Perhaps the angels even are forbid 
To laugh at us, or may not care to laugh. 
With kind eyes pitying our little hurts. 

'T is ludicrous that man should think he roams 
Freely at will a world planned for his use. 
Lo, what a mite he is ! Snatched hither and yon, 
Tossed round the sun, and in its orbit flashed 
Round other centres, orbits without end ; 
His bit of brain too small to even feel 
The spinning of the little hailstone, Earth. 
So his creeds glibly prate of choice and will, 
When his whole fate is an invisible speck 
Whirled through the orbits of Eternity. 



We think that we believe 
That human souls shall live, and live, 
When trees have rotted into mould. 
And all the rocks which these long hills enfold 
Have crumbled, and beneath new oceans lie. 
But why — ah, whv — 
If punv man is not indeed to die. 
Watch I with such disdain 
That human speck creeping along the plain, 



THE HERMITAGE 91 

And turn with such a careless scorn of men 

Back to the mountain's brow again, 

And feel more pleased that some small, fluttering 

thing 
Trusts me and hovers near on fearless wing, 
Than if the proudest man in all the land 
Had offered me in friendliness his hand ? 



However small the present creature man, — 
Ridiculous imitation of the gods. 
Weak plagiarism on some completer world, — 
Yet we can boast of that strong race to be. 
The savage broke the attraction which binds fast 
The fibres of the oak, and we to-day 
By cunning chemistry can force apart 
The elements of the air. That coming race 
Shall loose the bands by which the earth attracts j 
A drop of occult tincture, a spring touched 
Shall outwit gravitation ; men shall float. 
Or lift the hills and set them where they will. 
The savage crossed the lake, and we the sea. 
That coming race shall have no bounds or bars, 
But, like the fledgeling eaglet, leave the nest, — 
Our earthly eyrie up among the stars, — 
And freely soar, to tread the desolate moon, 
Or mingle with the neighbor folk of Mars. 
Yea, if the savage learned by sign and sound 
To bridge the chasm to his fellow's brain. 



92 THE HERMITAGE 

Till now we flash our whispers round the globe, 
That race shall signal over the abyss 
To those bright souls who throng the outer courts 
Of life, impatient who shall greet men first 
And solve the riddles that we die to know. 



'T is night : I sit alone among the hills. 
There is no sound, except the sleepless brook, 
Whose voice comes faintly from the depths below 
Through the thick darkness, or the sombre pines 
That slumber, murmuring sometimes in their dreams. 
Hark! on a fitful gust there came the sound 
Of the tide rising yonder on the bay. 
It dies again : 'twas like the rustling noise 
Of a great army mustering secretly. 
There rose an owl's cry, from the woods below. 
Like a lost spirit's. — Now all 's still again. — 
'T is almost fearful to sit here alone 
And feel the deathly silence and the dark. 
I will arise and shout, and hear at least 
My own voice answer. — Not an echo even ! 
I wish I had not uttered that wild cry ; 
It broke with such a shock upon the air. 
Whose leaden silence closed up after it, 
And seemed to clap together at my ears. 
The black depths of these muffled woods are thronged 
With shapes that wait some signal to swoop out. 
And swirl around and madden me with fear. 



THE HERMITAGE 93 

I will go climb that bare and rocky height 
Into the clearer air. 

So, here I breathe j 
That silent darkness smothered me. 

Away 
Across the bay, the city with its lights 
Twinkling against the horizon's dusky line. 
Looks a sea-dragon, crawled up on the shore. 
With rings of fire across his rounded back, 
And luminous claws spread out among the hills. 
Above, the glittering heavens. — Magnificent ! 
Oh, if a man could be but as a star. 
Having his place appointed, here to rise. 
And there to set, unchanged by earthly change, 
Content if it can guide some wandering bark. 
Or be a beacon to some homesick soul ! 

Those city-lights again : they draw my gaze 
As if some secret human sympathy 
Still held my heart down from the lonely heaven. 
A new-born constellation, settling there 
Below the Sickle's ruby-hilted curve. 

They gleam Not so ! No constellation they ; 

I mock the sad, strong stars that never fail 

In their eternal patience ; from below 

Comes that pale glare, like the faint, sulphurous flame 

Which plays above the ashes of a fire : 

So trembles the dull flicker of those lamps 

Over the burnt-out energies of man. 



94 THE HERMITAGE 

n 

A month since I last laid my pencil down, — 
An April, fairer than the Atlantic June, 
Whose calendar of perfect days was kept 
By daily blossoming of some new flower. 
The fields, whose carpets now were silken white, 
Next week were orange-velvet, next, sea-blue. 
It was as if some central fire of bloom. 
From which in other climes a random root 
Is now and then shot up, here had burst forth 
And overflowed the fields, and set the land 
Aflame with flowers. I watched them day by day, 
How at the dawn they wake, and open wide 
Their little petal-windows, how they turn 
Their slender necks to follow round the sun. 
And how the passion they express all day 
In burning color, steals forth with the dew 
All night in odor. 

I have wandered much 
These weeks, but everywhere a restless mind 
Has dogged me like the shadow at my heels. 
Sometimes I watched the morning mist arise, 
Like an imprisoned Genie from the stream. 
And wished that death would come on me like dawn, 
Drawing the spirit, that white, vaporous mist, 
Up from this noisy, fretted stream of life. 
To fall where God will, in his bounteous showers. 



THE HERMITAGE 95 

Sometimes I walked at sunset on the edge 

Of the steep gorge, and saw my shadow pace 

Along a shadow-wall across the abyss, 

And felt that we, with all our phantom deeds. 

Are but far-slanted shadows of some life 

That walks between our planet and its God. 

All the long nights — those memory-haunted nights, 

When sleepless conscience would not let me sleep. 

But stung, and stung, and pointed to the world 

Which like a coward I had left behind, 

I watched the heavens, where week by week the moon 

Slow swelled its silver bud, blossomed full gold, 

And slowly faded. 

Laid the pencil down — 
Why not ? Are there not books enough ? Is man 
A sick child that must be amused by songs. 
Or be made sicker with their foolish noise ? 

Then illness came : I should have argued, once, 
That the ill body gave me those ill thoughts ; 
But I have learned that spirit, though it be 
Subtile, and hard to trace, is mightier 
Than matter, and I know the poisoned mind 
Poisoned its shell. Three days of fever-fire 
Burned out my strength, leaving me scarcely power 
To reach the brook's side and my scanty food. 
What would I not have given to hear the voice 
Of some one who would raise my throbbing head 



96 THE HERMITAGE 

And shade the fevering sun, and cool my hand 

In her moist palms! But I lay there, alone. 

Blessed be sickness, which cuts down our pride 

And bares our helplessness. I have had new thoughts. 

I think the fever burned away some lies 

Which clogged the truthful currents of the brain. 

Am I quite happy here ? Have I the right, 

As wholly independent, to scorn men ? 

What do I owe them — self? Should I be I, 

Born in these hills? A savage rather! Food, 

The sailor-bread ? Yes, that took mill and men : 

Yet flesh and fowl are free ; but powder and gun — 

What human lives went to the making of them ? 

I am dependent as the villager 

Who lives bv the white wagon's daily round. 

Yea, better feed upon the ox, to which 

The knife is mercy after slavery, 

Than kill the innocent birds, and trustful deer 

Whose big blue eves have almost human pain ; 

That 's murder ! 

I scorned books : to those same books 
I owe the power to scorn them. 

I despised 
Men : from themselves I drew the pure ideal 
Bv which to measure them. 

At woman's love 
I laughed : but to that love I owe 
The hunger for a more abiding love. 
Their nestlings in our hearts leave vacant there 



THE HERMITAGE 97 

These hollow places, like a lark's round nest 
Left empty in the grass, and filled with flowers. 

What do I here alone ? 'T was not so strange, 
Weary of discords, that I chose to hear 
The one, clear, perfect note of solitude ; 
But now it plagues the ear, that one shrill note : 
Give me the chords back, even though some ring false. 



Unmarried to the steel, the flint is cold : 
Strike one to the other, and they wake in fire. 

A solitary fagot will not burn : 
Bring two, and cheerily the flame ascends. 
Alone, man is a lifeless stone ; or lies 
A charring ember, smouldering into ash. 



If the man riding yonder looks a speck, 
The town an ant-hill, that is but the trick 
Of our perspective: wisdom merely means 
Correction of the angles at the eye. 
I hold my hand up, so, before my face, — 
It blots ten miles of country, and a town. 
This little lying lens, that twists the rays. 
So cheats the brain that My house. My affairs, 
My hunger, or My happiness. My ache, 
And My religion, fill immensity ! 



98 THE HERMITAGE 

Yours merely dot the landscape casually. 

*T is well God docs not measure a man's worth 

By the image on his neighbor's retina. 



I am alone : the birds care not for me, 
Except to sing a little farther off. 
With looks that say, " What does this fellow here 
The loud brook babbles only for the flowers : 
The mountain and the forest take me not 
Into their meditations ; I disturb 
Their silence, as a child that drags his toy 
Across a chapel's porch. The viewless ones 
Who flattered me to claim their company 
By gleams of thought they tossed to me for alms, 
About their grander matters turn, nor deign 
To notice me, unless it were to say — 
As we put off a troublesome child — "There, go! 
Men are your fellows, go and mate with them ! " 



If I could find one soul that would not lie, 
I would go back, and we would arm our hands, 
And strike at every ugly weed that stands 

In God's wide garden of the world, and try. 
Obedient to the Gardener's commands. 

To set some smallest flowers before we die. 

One such I had found, — 
But she was bound. 



THE HERMITAGE 99 

Fettered and led, bid for and sold, 
Chained to a stone by a ring of gold. 

In a stony sense the stone loved her, too : 
Between our places the river was broad. 
Should she tread on a broken heart to go through — 
Could she put a man's life in mid-stream to be trod, 
To come over dry-shod ? 



Shame ! that a man with hand and brain 
Should, like a love-lorn girl, complain, 
Rhyming his dainty woes anew, 
When there is honest work to do ! 

What work, what work ? Is God not wise 
To rule the world He could devise ? 
Yet see thou, though the realm be His, 
He governs it by deputies. 
Enough to know of Chance and Luck, 
The stroke we choose to strike is struck; 
The deed we slight will slighted be. 
In spite of all Necessity. 
The Parcae's web of good and ill 
They weave with human shuttle still. 
And fate is fate through man's free will. 



With sullen thoughts that smoulder hour by hour 
In vague expectancy of help or hope 



100 THE HERMITAGE 

Which still eludes my brain, waiting I sit 

Like a blind beggar at a palace-gate, 

Who hears the rustling past of silks, and airs 

Of costly odor mock him blowing by. 

And feels within a dull and aching wish 

That the proud wall would let some coping down 

To crush him dead, and let him have his rest. 

No help from men : they could not, if they would. 
And God ? He lets His world be wrung with pain. 
No help at all then ? Let life be in vain : 
To get no help is surely greatest gain ; 
To taunt the hunger down is sweetest food. 



O mocker, Memory I From what floating cloud, 
Or from what witchery of the haunted wood, 
Or faintest perfumes, softly drifting through 
The lupines' lattice-bars of white and blue. 
Steals back upon my soul this weaker mood ? 
My heart is dreaming ; — in a shadowy room 
I breathe the vague scent of a jasmin-bloom 
That floats on waves of music, softer played, 
Till song and odor all the brain pervade; 
Swiftly across my cheek there sweeps the thrill 
Of burning lips, — then all is hushed and still; 
And round the vision in unearthly awe 
Deeps of enchanted starlight seem to draw, 
In which my soul sinks, falling noiselessly — 



THE HERMITAGE loi 

As from a lone ship, far-off, in the night, 
Out of a child's hand slips a pebble white, 
Glimmering and fading down the awful sea. 



That night, which pushed me out of Paradise, 
When the last guest had taken his mask of smiles 
And gone, she wheeled a sofa from the light 
Where I sat touching the piano-keys. 
And begged me play her weariness away. 
I played all sweet and solemn airs I knew. 
And when, with music mesmerized, she slept, 
I made the deep chords tell her dreams my love. 
Once, when they grew too passionate, I saw 
The faint blush ripen in their glow, and chide, 
Even in dreams, the rash, tumultuous thought. 
Then when I made them say, " Sleep on, dream on. 
For now we are together ; when thou wak'st 
Forevermore we are alone — alone," 
She sighed in sleep, and waked not : then I rose. 
And softly stooped my head, and, half in awe. 
Half passion-rapt, I kissed her lips farewell. 

Only the meek-mouthed blossoms kiss I now, 

Or the cold cheek that sometimes comes at night 
In haunted dreams, and brushes past my own. 

Ah, what hast thou to do with me, sweet song — 
Why hauntest thou and vexest so my dreams ? 
Have I not turned away from thee so long — 



102 THE HERMITAGE 

So long, and yet the starry midnight seems 
Astir with tremulous music, as of old, — 
Forbidden memories opening, fold on fold ? 

O ghost of Love, why, with thy rose-leaf lips. 
Dost thou still mock my sleep with kisses warm. 

Torturing mv dreams with touching fin<:;t'r tips, 
That madden me to clasp thy phantom form ? 

Have I not earned, by all these tears, at last. 

The right to rest untroubled by that Past ? 



Unto thy patient heart, my mother Earth, 
I come, a weary child. 

I have no claim, save that thou gav'st me birth, 
And hast sustained me with thy nurture mild. 
I have stood up alone these many years ; 
Now let me come and lie upon mv face. 
And spread my hands among the dewy grass. 
Till the slow wind's mesmeric touches pass 
Above my brain, and all its throbbing chase ; 
Into thy bosom take these bitter tears. 
And let them seem unto the innocent flowers 
Only as dew, or heaven's gentle showers ; 
Till, quieted and hushed against thy breast, 
I can forget to weep. 
And sink at last to sleep, — 
Long sleep and rest. 



THE HERMITAGE 103 

Her face ! 
It must have been her face, — 
No other one was ever half so fair, — 
No other head e'er bent with such meek grace 
Beneath that weight of beautiful blonde hair. 
In a carriage on the street of the town, 
Where I had strayed in walking from the bay, 
Just as the sun was going down. 
Shielding her sight from his latest ray. 
She sat, and scanned with eager eye 
The faces of the passers-by. 
Whom was she looking for? Not me — 
Yet what wild purpose can it be 
That tempted her to this wild land ? 
— I marked that on her lifted hand 
The diamonds no longer shine 
Of the ring that meant, not mine — not mine! 

Ah fool — fool — fool ! crawl back to thy den, 
Like a wounded beast as thou art, again ; 
Whosever she be, not thine — not thine! 



I sat last night on yonder ridge of rocks 
To see the sun set over Tamalpais, 
Whose tented peak, suffused with rosy mist, 
Blended the colors of the sea and sky 
And made the mountain one great amethyst 
Hanging against the sunset. 



104 THE HERMITAGE 

In the west 
There lav two clouds which parted company, 
Floating like two soft-breasted swans, and sailed 
Farther and farther separate, till one staved 
To make a mantle for the evening-star ; 
The other wept itself awav in rain. 
A fancv seized me ; — if, in other worlds, 
That Spirit from afar should call to me ! 
Across some starry chasm impassable. 
Weeping, " Oh, hadst thou only come to me ! — 
I loved vou so ! — I praved each night that God 
Would send you to me ! Now, alas ! too late, 
Too late — farewell ! " and still again, " farewell ! " 
Like the pulsation of a silenced bell 
Whose sobs beat on within the brain. 

I rose. 
And smote mv staff stronglv against the ground. 
And set mv face homeward, and set my heart 
Firm in a passionate purpose : there, in haste, 
W^ith that one echo goading me to speed, 
" If it should be too late — if it should be 
Too late — too late ! " I took a pen and wrote : 

" Dear Soul, if I am mad to speak to thee. 
And this taint glimmer which I call a hope 
Be but the corpse-light on the grave of hope — 
If thou, O darling Star, art in the ^Vest 
To be my Evening-star, and watch mv day 



THE HERMITAGE 105 

Fade slowly into desolate twilight, burn 

This folly in the flannes ; and scattered with 

Its ashes, let my madness be forgot. 

But if not so, oh be my Morning-star, 

And crown my East with splendor : come to me ! " 



A stern, wild, broken place for a man to walk 
And muse on broken fortunes; a rare place, — 
There in the Autumn weather, cool and still. 
With the warm sunshine clinging round the rocks 
Softly, in pity, like a woman's love, — 
To wait for some one who can never come 
As a man there was waiting. Overhead 
A happy bird sang quietly to himself. 
Unconscious of such sombre thoughts below. 
To which the song was background : — 

" Yet how men 
Sometimes will struggle, writhe, and scream at death ! 
It were so easy now, in the mild air. 
To close the senses, slowly sleep, and die ; 
To cease to be the shaped and definite cloud, 
And melt away into the fathomless blue; — 
Only to touch this crimson thread of life, 
Whose steady ripple pulses in my wrist. 
And watch the little current soak the grass, 
Till the haze came, then darkness, and then rest. 
Would God be angry if I stopped one life 



io6 THE HERMITAGE 

Among His myriads — such a worthless one? 

If I should pray, I wonder would He send 

An angel down out of that great, white cloud, 

(He surely could spare one from praising Him,) 

To tell if there is any better way 

Than — Look! ^Vhy, that is grand, now! (Am I 

mad ? 
I did not think I should go mad') That 's grand — 
One of the blessed spirits come like this 
To meet a poor, lean man among the rocks. 
And answer questions for him ? " 

There she stood, 
With blonde hair blowing back, as if the breeze 
Blew a light out of it, that ever played 
And hovered at her shoulders. Such blue eyes 
Mirrored the dreamy mountain distances, — 
(Yet, are the angels* faces thin and wan 
Like that ; and do thev have such mouths, so drawn, 
As if a sad song, some sad time, had died 
L^pon the lips, and left its echo there?) 

And the man rose, and stood 'vith folded hands 
And head bent, and his downcast looks in awe 
Touching her garment's hem, that, when she spoke, 
Trembled a little where it met her feet. 

" I am come, because you called to me to come. 
What were a'l other voices when I heard 



THE HERMITAGE 107 

The voice of my own soul's soul call to me? 

You knew I loved you — oh, you must have known ! 

Was it a noble thing to do, you think, 

To leave a lonely girl to die down there 

In the great empty world, and come up here 

To make a martyr's pillar of your pride? 

There has been nobler work done, there in the world, 

Than you have done this year ! " 

Then cried the man ; 
" O voice that I have prayed for — O sad voice. 
And woeful eyes, spare me if I have sinned ! 
There was a little ring you used to wear" — 

" O strange, wild Fates, that balance bliss and woe 
On such poor straws ! It was a brother's gift." 

" You never told me " — 

*' Did you ever ask ? " 

" You, too, were surely prouder then than now ! " 

" Dear, I am sadder now : the head must bend 
A little, when one 's weeping." 

Then the man, — 
While half his mind, bewildered, at a flash 
Took in the wide, lone place, the singing bird, 
The sunshine streaming past them like a wind, 



io8 THE HERMITAGE 

And the broad tree that moved as though it breathed : 
" Oh, if 't is possible that in the world 
There lies some low, mean work for me to do, 
Let me go there alone : I am ashamed 
To wear life's crown when I flung down its sword. 
Crammed full of pride, and lust, and littleness, 
O God, I am not worthy of thy gifts ! 
Let me find penance, till, years hence, perchance. 
Made pure by toil, and scourged with pain and 
prayer " — 

Then a voice answered through His creature's lips, — 
" God asks no penance but a better life. 
He purifies by pain — He only ; 't is 
A remedy too dangerous for our 
Blind pharmacy. Lo ! we have tried that way, 
And borne what fruit, or blossoms even, save one 
Poor passion-flower ! Come, take thy happiness ; 
In happy hearts are all the sunbeams forged 
That brighten up our weatherbeaten world. 
Come back with me — Come ! for I love you — 
Come ! " 



If it was not a dream : perchance it was — 
Often it seems so, and I wonder when 
I shall awaken on the mountain-side. 
With a little bitter taste left in the mouth 
Of too much sleep, or too much happiness, 
And sigh, and wish that I might dream again. 



APRIL IN OAKLAND 

Was there last night a snowstorm ? 

So thick the orchards stand, 
With drift on drift of blossom-flakes 

Whitening all the land. 

Or have the waves of life that swelled 
The green buds, day by day. 

Broken at once in clinging foam 
And scattered odor-spray ? 

The winds come drowsy with the breath 

Of cherry and of pear, 
Sighing their perfume-laden wings 

No more of sweet can bear. 

Over the garden-gateway 

That parts the tufted hedge, 
Rimming the idly twinkling bay. 

Sleeps the blue mountains' edge. 

Yon fleece of clouds in heaven. 

So delicate and fair, 
Seems a whole league of orchard-bloom » 

Sailing along the air. 



112 APRIL IN OAKLAND 

Oh, loveliness of nature ! 

Oh, sordid minds of men ! 
Without, a world of bloom and balm — 

A sour, sad soul within. 

O winds that sweep the orchard 
With Orient spices sweet, 

Whv bring ye with that desolate sound 
The dead leaves to my feet ? 

Ah, sweeter were the fragrance 
That I to-day have found. 

If last year's crumbled leaves of love 
Were buried under ground ; 

And fairer were the shadowed troops 
That fleck the distant hill, 

If shades of clouds that will not pass 
Dimmed not my memory still. 

Better than all the beauty 

Which cloud or blossom shows 

Is the blue sky that arches all 
With measureless repose. 

And better than the bright blue sky. 

To know that far away 
Sweep all the silent host of stars 

Behind the veil of day. 



APRIL IN OAKLAND 113 

And best to feel that there and here. 

About us and above, 
Move on the purposes of God 
In justice and in love. 



TO CHILD SARA 

I LOOKED in a dew-drop's hoart to-day 

As it clung on a leaf of clover, 
Holding a sparkle of starry light, 
Like a liquid drop of opal bright 
With diamond dusted over. 

In that least globe of quivering dew 

The sunnv scene around, 
Diminished to a grass-blade's width — 
Scarcelv a fairv's finger-breadth 

All imaged there I found : 

The spreading oak, the fir's soft fringe, 

The grain-field's brightening green, 
The linnet that flew fluttering by. 
And, over all, the dear blue skv. 
The bending boughs between : 

And all the night, as from its nest 

It gazes up afar. 
Its bosom holds the heavens deep. 
Whose constellations o'er it sweep. 

And mirrors everv star. 



TO CHILD SARA 115 

Child, is that drop of dew — your soul — 

With mirrored heaven as bright? 
(Forgive me that I ask of you, 
Whose heart I know is pure and true 
And stainless as the light) : 

The sunshine, and the starlight too, — 

Fair hope, and faith as fair. 
Courage, and patience, silent power, 
And wisdom for each troubled hour, — 

Tell me, are they all there ? 

Your quiet grace and kindly words 

Have influence sweet and strong; 
Your hand and voice can calm the brain 
And cheer the heavy hearts of men 
With music and with song: 

Let the soul answer — can it give 

That music clear and calm — 
The rhythmic years, the holier aim. 
The scorn of pleasure, fortune, fame — 

To make our life a psalm ? 

All round the house, your birthday morn 

The budded orchards stand ; 
And we can watch from every room 
The trees all blushing into bloom — 

Blossoms on every hand: 



ii6 TO CHILD SARA 

So may your Life be, many a year, 

A fair and goodly tree ; 
Not blossoming only, but sublime 
With fruit, so hastening the time 
When Earth shall Eden be. 



EASTERN WINTER 

Cold — cold — the very sun looks cold, 
With those thin rays of chilly gold 
Laid on that gap of bluish sky 
That glazes like a dying eye. 

The naked trees are shivering, 
Each cramped and bare branch quivering, 
Cutting the bleak wind into blades, 
Whose edge to brain and bone invades. 

That hard ground seems to ache, all day. 

Even for a sheet of snow, to lay 

Upon its icy feet and knees. 

Stretched stiffly there to freeze and freeze. 

And yon shrunk mortal — what 's within 
That nipped and winter-shriveled skin ? 
The pinched face drawn in peevish lines. 
The voice that through his blue lips whines,- 

The frost has got within, you see, — 
Left but a selfish me and me : 
The heart is chilled, its nerves are numb. 
And love has long been frozen dumb. 



u8 EASTERN WINTER 

Ah, give me back the clime I know, ; 

Where all the year geraniums blow. 

And hyacinth-buds bloom white for snow; 

Where hearts beat warm with life's delight, j 
Through radiant winter's sunshine bright, 
And summer's starry deeps of night ; j 

Where man may let earth's beauty thaw 

The wintry creed which Calvin saw, j 

That God is only Power and Law ; 

And out of Nature's Bible prove, 

That here below as there above 

Our Maker — Father — God — is Love. 



SLEEPING 

Hushed within her quiet bed 
She is lying all the night. 
In her pallid robes of white, 
Eyelids on the pure eyes pressed, 
Soft hands folded on the breast, — 

And you thought I meant it — dead? 

Nay ! I smile at your shocked face: 
In the morning she will wake, 
Turn her dreams to sport, and make 
All the household glad and gay, 
Yet for many a merry day, 

With her beauty and her grace. 

But some summer 't will be said, — 
" She is lying all the night. 
In her pallid robes of white. 
Eyelids on the tired eyes pressed, 
Hands that cross upon the breast : " 

We shall understand it — dead! 

Yet't will only be a sleep: 

When, with songs and dewy light. 
Morning blossoms out of night. 
She will open her blue eyes 
'Neath the palms of Paradise, 

While we foolish ones shall weep. 



STARLIGHT 

They think me daft, who nightly meet 
My face turned starward, while my feet 
Stumble along the unseen street ; 

But should man's thoughts have only room 
For Earth, his cradle and his tomb, 
Not for his Temple's grander gloom ? 

And must the prisoner all his days 
Learn but his dungeon's narrow ways 
And never through its grating gaze ? 

Then let me linger in your sight, 

My only amaranths ! blossoming bright 

As over Eden's cloudless night. 

The same vast belt, and square, and crown- 
That on the Deluge glittered down. 
And lit the roofs of Bethlehem town ! 

Ye make me one with all my race, 
A victor over time and space, 
Till all the path of men I pace. 



STARLIGHT 121 

Far-speeding backward in my brain 
We build the Pyramids again, 
And Babel rises from the plain ; 

And climbing upward on your beams 
I peer within the Patriarchs' dreams, 
Till the deep sky with angels teems. 

My Comforters ! — Yea, why not mine ? 
The power that kindled you doth shine, 
In man, a mastery divine j 

That Love which throbs in every star, 
And quickens all the worlds afar. 
Beats warmer where his children are. 

The shadow of the wings of Death 
Broods over us ; we feel his breath : 
" Resurgam " still the spirit saith. 

These tired feet, this weary brain. 
Blotted with many a mortal stain. 
May crumble earthward — not in vain. 

With swifter feet that shall not tire. 
Eyes that shall fail not at your fire 
Nearer your splendors I aspire. 



A DEAD BIRD IN WINTER 

The cold, hard sky and hidden sun, 

The stiffened trees that shiver so, 
With bare twigs naked every one 

To these harsh winds that freeze the snow, — 

It was a bitter place to die. 

Poor birdie ! Was it easier, then, 
On such a world to shut thine eye. 

And sleep away from life, than when 

The apple-blossoms tint the air, 
And, twittering in the sunny trees, 

Thy fellow-songsters flit and pair. 

Breasting the warm, caressing breeze ? 

Nay, it were easiest, I feel. 

Though 't were a brighter Earth to lose, 
To let the summer shadows «teal 

About thee, bringing their repose ; 

When the noon hush was on the air. 

And on the flowers the warm sun shined, 

And Earth seemed all so sweet and fair, 
That He who made it must be kind. 



A DEAD BIRD IN WINTER 123 

So I, too, could not bear to go 

From Life in this unfriendly clime, 
To lie beneath the crusted snow, 

When the dead grass stands stifF with rime ; 

But under those blue skies of home, 

Far easier were it to lie down 
Where the perpetual violets bloom 

And the rich moss grows never brown ; 

Where linnets never cease to build 

Their nests, in boughs that always wave 

To odorous airs, with blessing filled 

From nestled blossoms round my grave. 



SPRING TWILIGHT 

Singing in the rain, robin ? 

Rippling out so fast 
All thy flute-like notes, as if 

This singing were thy last ! 

After sundown, too, robin ? 

Though the fields are dim, 
And the trees grow dark and still, 

Dripping from leaf and limb. 

'T is heart-broken music, — 
That sweet, faltering strain, — 

Like a mingled memory. 
Half ecstasy, half pain. 

Surely thus to sing, robin. 
Thou must have in sight 

Beautiful skies behind the shower, 
And dawn beyond the night. 

Would thy faith were mine, robin ! 

Then, though night were long, 
All its silent hours should melt 

Their sorrow into song. 



EVENING 

The Sun is gone : those glorious chariot-wheels 
Have sunk their broadening spokes of flame, and left 
Thin rosy films wimpled across the West, 
Whose last faint tints melt slowly in the blue, 
As the last trembling cadence of a song 
Fades into silence sweeter than all sound. 

Now the first stars begin to tremble forth 
Like the first instruments of an orchestra 
Touched softly, one by one. — There in the East 
Kindles the glory of moonrise : how its waves 
Break in a surf of silver on the clouds ! — 
White, motionless clouds, like soft and snowy wings 
Which the great Earth spreads, sailing round the Sun. 

O silent stars ! that over ages past 
Have shone serenely as ye shine to-night, 
Unseal, unseal the secret that ye keep ! 
Is it not time to tell us why we live ? 
Through all these shadowy corridors of years 
(Like some gray Priest, who through the Mysteries 
Led the blindfolded Neophyte in fear). 
Time leads us blindly onward, till in wrath 
Tired Life would seize and throttle its stern guide, 



1 26 EVENING 

And force him tell us whither and how long. 

But Time gives back no answer — only points 

With motionless finger to eternity, 

Which deepens over us, as that deep sky 

Darkens above me : only its vestibule 

Glimmers with scattered stars ; and down the West 

A silent meteor slowly slides afar, 

As though, pacing the garden-walks of heaven, 

Some musing seraph had let fall a flower. 



THE ORGAN 

It is no harmony of human making, 

Though men have built those pipes of burnished 
gold; 
Their music, out of Nature's heart awaking. 

Forever new, forever is of old. 

Man makes not — only finds — all earthly beauty, 
Catching a thread of sunshine here and there, 

Some shining pebble in the path of duty. 
Some echo of the songs that flood the air. 

That prelude is a wind among the willows. 
Rising until it meets the torrent's roar ; 

Now a wild ocean, beating his great billows 
Among the hollow caverns of the shore. 

It is the voice of some vast people, pleading 

For justice from an ancient shame and wrong, — 

The tramp of God's avenging armies, treading 
With shouted thunders of triumphant song. 

O soul, that sittest chanting dreary dirges, 
Couldst thou but rise on some divine desire, 



128 THE ORGAN 

As those deep chords upon their swelling surges 
Bear up the wavering voices of the choir ! 

But ever lurking in the heart, there lingers 
The trouble of a false and jarring tone. 

As some great Organ which unskillful fingers 
Vex into discords when the Master's gone. 



LOST LOVE 

Bury it, and sift 

Dust upon its light, — 
Death must not be left, 

To offend the sight. 

Cover the old love — 

Weep not on the mound — 
Grass shall grow above, 

Lilies spring around. 

Can we fight the law, 

Can our natures change — 
Half-way through withdraw — 

Other lives exchange ? 

You and I must do 

As the world has done. 

There is nothing new 
Underneath the sun. 

Fill the grave up full — 
Put the dead love by — 

Not that men are dull, 
Not that women lie, — 



130 LOST LOVE 

But 't is well and right — 
Safest, you will find — 

That the Out of Sight 
Should be Out of Mind 



A MEMORY 

Upon the barren, lonely hill 

We sat to watch the sinking sun ; 
Below, the land grew dim and still, 

Whose evening shadow had begun. 
Her finger parted the shut book, — 

At " Aylmer's Field " the leaf was turned, — 
Round her meek head and sainted look 

The sunset like a halo burned. 
She knew not that I watched her face — 

Her spirit through her eyes was gone 
To some far-ofF and Sabbath place. 

And left me gazing there alone. 
Could she have known, that quiet hour, 

What ghosts her presence raised in me, 
What graves were opened by the power 

Of that unconscious witchery. 
She would not thus have sat and seen 

The bird that balanced far below 
On the blue air, and watched the sheen 

Along his broad wings come and go. 
For was she not another's bride ? 

And I — what right had I to feast 
Upon those eyes in revery wide. 

With hungering gaze like famished beast ? 



132 A MEMORY 

Was it before my fate I knelt — 

The human fate, the mighty law — 
To hunger for the heart I felt, 

And love the lovely face I szw ? 
Or was it only that the brow, 

Or some sweet trick of hand or tone. 
Brought from the Past to haunt me now 

Her ghost whose love was mine alone ? 
I know not ; but we went to rest 

That eve, from songs that haunt me still, 
And all night long, in visions blest, 

I walked with angels on the hill. 



LIFE 

Forenoon and afternoon and night, — Forenoon, 
And afternoon, and night, — Forenoon, and — what! 
The empty song repeats itself. No more ? 
Yea, that is Life : make this forenoon sublime, 
This afternoon a psalm, this night a prayer. 
And Time is conquered, and thy crown is won. 



FERTILITY 

Clear water on smooth rock 

Could give no foothold for a single flower, 

Or slenderest shaft of grain : 

The stone must crumble under storm and rain, 

The forests crash beneath the whirlwind's power, 

And broken boughs from many a tempest-shock. 

And fallen leaves of many a wintry hour, 

Must mingle in the mould. 

Before the harvest whitens on the plain. 

Bearing an hundred-fold. 

Patience, O weary heart ! 

Let all thy sparkling hours depart. 

And all thy hopes be withered with the frost. 

And every effort tempest-tost — 

So, when all life's green leaves 

Are fallen, and mouldered underneath the sod. 

Thou shalt go not too lightly to thy God, 

But heavy with full sheaves. 



THREE SONGS 

Sing me, thou Singer, a song of gold ! 

Said a careworn man to me : 
So I sang of the golden summer days, 
And the sad, sweet autumn's yellow haze, 
Till his heart grew soft, and his mellowed gaze 

Was a kindly sight to see. 

Sing me, dear Singer, a song of love ! 

A fair girl asked of me : 
Then I sang of a love that clasps the Race, 
Gives all, asks naught — till her kindled face 
Was radiant with the starry grace 

Of blessed Charity. 

Sing me, O Singer, a song of life ! 

Cried an eager youth to me : 
And I sang of the life without alloy. 
Beyond our years, till the heart of the boy 
Caught the golden beauty, and love, and joy 

Of the great Eternity. 



THE WORLD'S SECRET 

I KNOW the splendor of the Sun, 

And bcautv in the leaves, and moss, and grass; 
I love the birds' small voices every one, 

And all the hours have kindness as they pass ; 

But still the heart can apprehend 

A deeper purport than the brain may know : 
I see it at the dying daylight's end. 

And hear it when the winds begin to blow. 

It strives to speak from all the world, 

Out of dumb earth, and moaning ocean-tides ; 

And brooding Night, beneath her pinions furled, 
Some message writ in starrv cipher hides. 

Must I go seeking evervwhere 

The meanings that behind our objects be — 
A depth scrcner in the azure air, 

A something more than peace upon the sea ? 

Not one least deed one soul to bless ? 

Unto the stern-eyed Future shall I bear 
Onlv the sense of pain without redress. 

Self-sickness, and a dull and stale despair? 



THE WORLD'S SECRET 137 

Nay, let me shape, in patience slow, 

My years, like the Holy Child his bird of clay. 
Till suddenly the clod its Master know. 

And thrill with life, and soar with songs away. 



SEEMING AND BEING 

The brave old motto, "Seem not — only be," — 

Would it were set ablaze against the sky 

In golden letters, where the world must read ! 

What is there done for the honest doing's sake, 

In these poor times gone mad with self-parade ? 

There 's not a picture of the Cross but bears | 

The painter's name as prominent as the Christ's : ' 

There 's not a scene, of such peculiar grace 

That one would fain forget men's meanness there, 

But from the rocks some rascal clothier's name 

Stares in great capitals, till one could wish 

The knave hung from his signboard, for a sign : I 

There's not a graveyard in the land, but lo ! 

On the white tablets of the dead, full cut 

Below their sacred names, his shameless name 

Who carved the marble ! 

I 
Is it not pitiful ? ' 

We are all actors, and all audience. 

Yea, such a dreary farce we make our lives, 

That something is expected of a man 

Upon his deathbed : " Hark ve now, good friends, , 

These fine last words, this notable braver}-, — sec ! *; 

So even the grim cross-bones of awful Death 



SEEMING AND BEING 139 

Must take an attitude, and the skull smirk 
For a last picture. 

Here Is a nation, too 
(God help it !), that dare scarcely act its mind. 
But walks the world's stage, quaking with the thought, 
" What will great England think of me for this ? " 

The poet scoffs at fame, then sets himself, 
Full-titled, with a portrait at the front ; 
Each beautiful impatient soul who left 
The world he scorned, still lingered near enough 
To listen, not displeased, and hear the world 
Admiringly relate how he had scorned it ; 
Even our great doubting Thomas, in young days 
When he praised silence, did it with loud speech, 
That ever too distinctly told, " 'T is I, 
Thomas, so noisily abuse your noise ! " 

Is it not enough for the trumpet that the god 
Has chosen it to sound his message through ? 
Must the brass blare in its own petty praise ? 
And can we never do the right, and do it 
As though we were alone upon the earth, 
And the gods blind ? 



WEATHER-BOUND 

Thou pitiless, false sea ! 
How, like a woman, thou wilt softly sigh 

With heaving breast where bubble-jewels shine, 
Or, beckoning, toss thy foam-white arms on high, 

And laugh with those blue sunny eyes of thine ! 

Ah, crouching, creeping sea ! 
Thou tiger-cat ! how, while the winds make pause 

To stroke thy long smooth back in quiet play, 
Thou canst unsheathe thy velvet-hidden claws 

And spring all unawares upon thy prey ! 

Thou treacherous, cruel sea ! 
How thou wilt show thy glittering smile at night. 

Hiding thy fangs, hushing thy fiendish cry. 
And rise all gentle sport from licking white 

The bones of men that underneath thee lie ! 

O bitter, bitter sea ! 
Didst thou not fawn about my naked feet. 

When I stood with thee on the beach, and say 
That thou wouldst bear me swiftly home to meet 

My darling, waiting there in vain to-day ? 



WEATHER-BOUND 141 

Yea, thou most mighty sea ! 
Keep then that promise murmured on the shore ; 

Put thy great shoulders to our loitering keel, 
Not as in rage and wrath thou hast before — 

Let the good ship thy help gigantic feel. 

Thou answerest me, O sea ! 
Lifting in silence, o'er the waters stilled. 

The shattered fragment of a rainbow fair, 
A mocking promise, ne'er to be fulfilled. 

Based on the waves and broken in mid-air. 



SUMMER AFTERNOON 

Far in hollow mountain canons 
Brood with purple-folded pinions, 
FK>cks of drowsv distance-colors on their nests ; 
And the hare round slopes for forests 
Have cloud-shadows, floating forests, 
On their breasts. 

Winds arc wakening and dying. 
Questions low with low replying, 
Through the oak a hushed and trembling whisper 
goes : 
Faint and rich the air with odors. 
Hyacinth and spicy odors 
Of the rose. 

Even the flowerless acacia 
Is one flower — such slender stature, 
With its latticed leaves a-tremble in the sun : 
They have shower-drops for blossoms, 
Quivering globes of diamond blossoms. 
Every one. 

In the blue of heaven holy 
Clouds go floating, floating slowly, 



SUMMER AFTERNOON 143 

Pure in snowy robe and sunny silver crown ; 
And they seem like gentle angels — 
Leisure-full and loitering angels, 
Looking down. 

Half the birds are wild with singing, 
And the rest with rhythmic winging 
Sing in melody of motion to the sight ; 
Every little sparrow twitters. 
Cheerily chirps, and cheeps, and twitters 
His delight. 

Sad at heart amid the splendor, 
Dull to all the radiance tender. 
What can I for such a world give back again ? 
Could I only hint the beauty — 
Some least shadow of the beauty. 
Unto men ! 



A POET'S APOLOGY 

Truth cut on high in tablets of hewn stone, 
Or on great columns gorgeously adorned. 

Perchance were left alone. 
Passed by and scorned ; 

But Truth enchased upon a jewel rare, 

A man would keep, and next his bosom wear. 

So, many an hour, I sit and carve my gems — 
Ten spoiled, for one in purer beauty set : 

Not for kings' diadems — 
Some amulet 

That mav be worn o'er hearts that toil and plod, — 

Though but one pearl that bears the name of God. 



A PRAYER 

O God, our Father, if we had but truth ! 

Lost truth — which thou perchance 
Didst let man lose, lest all his wayward youth 

He waste in song and dance ; 
That he might gain, in searching, mightier powers 
For manlier use in those foreshadowed hours. 

If, blindly groping, he shall oft mistake, 

And follow twinkling motes 
Thinking them stars, and the one voice forsake 

Of Wisdom for the notes 
Which mocking Beauty utters here and there, 
Thou surely wilt forgive him, and forbear ! 

Oh, love us, for we love thee. Maker — God! 

And would creep near thy hand, 
And call thee " Father, Father," from the sod 

Where by our graves we stand. 
And pray to touch, fearless of scorn or blame. 
Thy garment's hem, which Truth and Good we name. 



A DAILY MIRACLE 

June's sunshine on the broad porch shines 
Through tangled curtains of crossing vines; 
1 he restless dancing of the leaves 
Dusky webs of shadow weaves, 
That wander on the oaken floor, 
Or cross the threshold of the door. 
Scattered where'er their mazes run 
Lie little phantoms of the sun : 
Whatever chink the sunbeam found, 
Crooked or narrow, on the ground 
The shadowy image still is round. 

So the image of God in the heart of a man, 
Which truth makes, rifting as it can 
Through the narrow crooked ways 
Of our restless deeds and days. 
Still is His image — bright or dim — 
And scorning it is scorning Him. 



INFLUENCES 

From the scarlet sea of sunset, 

Tossing up its waves of fire 
To a floating spray of splendor, 

Kindles through me mad desire 

Now — now — now to call her mine! 



From the ashen gray of twilight 
Musings dark as shadows linger, 

Slowly creeping, leave me weeping — 
While in silence round my finger 
That long glossy lock I twine. 

From the holy hush of starlight 
Sinks a peace upon my spirit. 

And a voice of hope and patience — 
All the quiet night I hear it — 

Whispers, " Wait, for she is thine ! '* 



POEMS WRITTEN BETWEEN 
1867 AND 1872 

A BIRD'S SONG 

The shadow of a bird 

On the shadow of a bough ; 
Sweet and clear his song is heard, 

"Seek me now — I seek thee now." 
The bird swings out of reach in the swaying tree, 
But his shadow on the garden walk below belongs to 
me. 

The phantom of my Love 

False dreams with hope doth fill, 
Softly singing far above, 

" Love me still — I love thee still ! " 
The cruel vision hovers at my sad heart's door, 
But the soul-love is soaring out of reach forevermore. 



THE NEWS-GIRL 

A TINY, blue-eyed, elfin lass 
Meets me upon the street I pass 

In going to the ferry ; 
Barefooted, scantly clothed, and thin, 
With little weazen cheeks and chin, 

Yet always chirk and merry : 

Ever merry, however pale, 
I always hear her, as I draw near her : 

« 'Ere 's the Mail, sir ! — Mail ? — Mail ? " 

With that same piping little tune. 
She waits there every afternoon. 

Selling her bunch of papers; 
She scarcely looks aside to see 
What 's passing by, of grief or glee — 

No childish tricks or capers ; 

Her pattering bare feet never fail 
To run and meet me, and chirping greet me, 

« 'Ere 's the Mail, sir ! — MaU f — Mail f " 

Her dingy frock is scant and torn ; 
Her old, old face looks wan and worn, 

Yet always sweet and sunny ; 
Week in, week out, she is the same — 



150 THE NEWS-GIRL 

I asked her once what was her name, 

And, jingling all her money. 

Holding a paper up for sale, 
The little midget answered, " Bridget ! 

Want the Mail, sir ? — Mail ? — Mail ? ** 

I wonder where she goes at night. 

And in what nook the poor young sprite 

Finds room for rest and sleeping ; 
I wonder if her little bones 
Go home to blows and cuffs, and tones 

That roughly set her weeping — 

When, rainy days, the pennies fail 
And few are buying, for all her crying, 

" 'Ere 's the Mail, sir ! — Mail ? — Mail ? " 

O rich and happy people ! you 

W^hose wavs are smooth, and woes are few, 

Whose life brims o'er with blisses. 
Pity the little patient face. 
That never knows the tender grace 

Of kind caress or kisses. 

For you, the blessings never fail ; 
For her 't is only to wait there lonely 

And cry, '^ The Mail, sir ? — Mail ? —Mail ? 



THE HOUSE AND THE HEART 

Every house with its garret, 
Lumbered with rubbish and relics, — 
Spinning-wheels leaning in corners. 
Chests under spider-webbed rafters, 
Brittle and yellow old letters. 
Grandfather's things and grandmother's.. 
There overhead, at the midnight. 
Noises of creaking and stepping 
Startle the hush of the chambers — 
Ghosts on their tiptoes repassing. 

Every house with its garden ; 
Some little plot — a half-acre, 
Or a mere strip by the windows. 
Flower-beds and narrow box-borders, 
Something spicily fragrant. 
Something azure and golden. 
There the small feet of the sparrow 
Star the fresh mould round the roses ; 
And, in the shadowy moonlight. 
Wonderful secrets are whispered. 

Every heart with its garret. 
Cumbered with relics and rubbish — 
Wheels that are silent forever, 
Leaves that are faded and broken. 



152 THE HOUSE AND THE HEART 

Foolish old wishes and fancies, 
Cobwebs of doubt and suspicion — 
Useless, unbeautiful, growing 
Year by year thicker and faster : 
Naught but a fire or a moving 
Ever can clear it, or clean it. 

Every heart with its garden ; 
Some little corner kept sacred, 
Fragrant and pleasant with blossoms ; 
There the forget-me-nots cluster. 
And pure love-violets, hidden, 
Guessed but by sweetness all round them; 
Some little strip in the sunshine. 
Cheery and warm, for above it 
Rest the deep, beautiful heavens, 
Blue, and beyond, and forever. 



A PRAYER FOR PEACE 

Father in Heaven ! humbly before thee 
Kneeling in prayer thy children appear; 

We in our weakness, we in our blindness, 
Thou in thy wisdom, hear us, oh hear ! 

God watching o'er us sleeps not nor slumbers, 
Faithful night watches his angels keep. 

Through all the darkness, unto the dawning, 
To his beloved he giveth sleep. 



A TROPICAL MORNING AT SEA 

Sky in its lucent splendor lifted 

Higher than cloud can be ; 
Air with no breath of earth to stain it, 

Pure on the perfect sea. 

Crests that touch and tilt each other, 

Jostling as they comb ; 
Delicate crash of tinkling water, 

Broken in pearling foam. 

Flashings — or is it the pinewood's whispers, 

Babble of brooks unseen, 
Laughter of winds when they find the blossoms, 

Brushing aside the green ? 

Waves that dip, and dash, and sparkle ; 

foam-wreaths slipping by. 
Soft as a snow of broken roses 

Afloat over mirrored sky. 

Off to the East the steady sun-track 

Golden meshes fill — 
Webs of fire, that lace and tangle. 

Never a moment still. 



A TROPICAL MORNING AT SEA 155 

Liquid palms but clap together, 

Fountains, flower-like, grow — 
Limpid bells on stems of silver — 

Out of a slope of snow. 

Sea-depths, blue as the blue of violets — 

Blue as a summer sky, 
When you blink at its arch sprung over 

Where in the grass you lie. 

Dimly an orange bit of rainbow 

Burns where the low west clears. 
Broken in air, like a passionate promise 

Born of a moment's tears. 

Thinned to amber, rimmed with silver, 

Clouds in the distance dwell. 
Clouds that are cool, for all their color, 

Pure as a rose-lipped shell. 

Fleets of wool in the upper heavens 

Gossamer wings unfurl ; 
Sailing so high they seem but sleeping 

Over yon bar of pearl. 

What would the great world lose, I wonder — 

Would it be missed or no — 
If we stayed in the opal morning, 

Floating forever so ? 



156 A TROl'ICAL McmNING AT SEA 

Swung to sleep by the swaying water, 

Only to dream all day — 
Blow, salt wind from the north upstarting, 

Scatter such dreams away ! 



THE PICTURE OF THE WORLD 

One morning of a summer's day, 
Upon a painter's easel lay 
The picture of a child at play : 
A form of laughing life and grace. 
And finished all except the place 
Left empty for the untouched face. 
In nodding violets, half asleep, 
The dancing feet were ankle deep : 
One rounded arm was heaping up 
With clover-bloom and buttercup; 
The other tossed a blossom high 
To lure a wandering butterfly. 

'T was easy to imagine there 
In that round frame of rippling hair 
The wanting face, all bright and fair. 

A sadder artist came that day, 
Looked at the picture where it lay. 
And, sitting in the painter's place. 
He painted in the missing face. 
From his own heart the lines he took — » 
Lo ! what a wan and woeful look ! 
Under the mocking wreath of flowers, 
A brow worn old with weary hours : 



158 THE PICTURE OF THE WORLD 

A face, once seen, one still must see; 

Wise, awful-eyed solemnity. 

Lips long ago too tired to hide 

The torture-lines where love had died ; 

The look of a despair too late. 

Too dead even to be desperate ; 

A face for which so far away 

The struggle and the protest lay. 

No memory of it more could stay. 

Repulsed and reckless, withered, wild, 

It stared above the dancing child. 

At night a musing poet came 

And, shuddering, wrote beneath its name. 



FOR THE GIFTS OF THE SPIRIT 

Send down thy truth, O God ! 
Too long the shadows frown ; 
Too long the darkened way we 've trod : 
Thy truth, O Lord, send down ! 

Send down thy Spirit free. 
Till wilderness and town 
One temple for thy worship be : 
Thy Spirit, oh, send down ! 

Send down thy love, thy life, 
Our lesser lives to crown, 
And cleanse them of their hate and strife : 
Thy living love send down ! 

Send down thy peace, O Lord ! 
Earth's bitter voices drown 
In one deep ocean of accord : 
Thy peace, O God, send down ! 



THE TWO WAYS 

'T WAS Sabbath ; and, with clang on clang, 

A deafening crash of church bells rang: 

The day for penance and for dole, 

For sackcloth and an ashen soul — 

So had my childhood learned in fear. 

And forth I fared, with mood severe, 

Clad in mv soberest and best. 

With God's own world to keep his Rest. 

Through orchard, field, and wood I paced. 

Rasping a dry thought, solemn-faced. 

But suddenly, " What is this ? " I thought ; 

" Does Earth keep Sabbath as she ought ? " 

And looking round about, I sought 

Some comrade with me, on my way, 

In woeful weeds to drape the day. 

— All nature given o'er to glee ! 

No psalms, no dirge, no minor key ; 

Each grass-blade nodding to the rest, 

As one who knows a hidden jest ; 

The thrush still hurrying, loud and gay, 

To find the lost thread of his lay ; 

And chasing, as he flies along. 

The fleeing ripple of his song. 

The giddy bluebird flits and sings — 



THE TWO WAYS i6i 

A bit of azure sky on wings. 
Down the tree-trunks the shadows trace 
The tremble of their dancing lace ; 
The drifting apple-blossoms meek 
Brush their white kisses by my cheek ; 
The bobolink bubbles o'er with glee 
In tumbling, headlong melody ,- 
And from the catbird's hedge is sent 
His quick, low chuckle of content. 

In all that choral symphony 
Of flower, and bird, and waving tree, 
And happy sky, and laughing sun, 
I found in holy woe not one. 
— Save only, through the churchyard gloom 
Returning, at a new-made tomb 
A bitter mourner, black-arrayed. 
Whom fools in robes had faithless made, 
Wept the lost angel he had wed 
As though her soul — and God — were dead. 
Him only ; and, as evening fell. 
An owl, that sought some mate as well, 
Was hooting from his hollow tree — 
" Will none be doleful now with me. 
Will none with me sad penance do ? " 
And still he hooted : " Who ? — who, who ? " 



THE CLOCKS OF GNOSTER-TOWN 

It was ever so many years ago, 

In the days when few were wise, and so 

All thought they were wiser than any, you know, 

In the kingdom of Mhundus over the sea. 

The town of Gnoster used to be ; 

And on a day which is known to me 

Yunus, a small man, bald and brown. 

Came to dwell in this Gnoster-town. 

'T was a queer little village, getting full 
Already when Yunus arrived ; quite dull. 
Or a little stupid, you might say. 
For the Now was ruled by the Yesterday, 
And highly indecorous it was deemed 
To differ from what one's neighbors seemed, 
So the average ran rather low. 
Respectable though, as majorities go, 
And the social tone was safe, but slow. 

All over Mhundus time was law; 
*T was the promptest kingdom ever you saw. 
The royal rule was, " Follow the sun ; 
Do what you do when 't is time 't was done. 
Do with your might ; seek wisdom, pursue it ; 
Don't wait for the licensed venders to do it." 

So Gnoster, too, went in for time 



THE CLOCKS OF GNOSTER-TOWN 163 

In its feeble way, and thought the chime 

Of its thousand clocks pealed out so far 

That they kept the hour for the furtherest star; 

And many a citizen demure 

Slept sound and sweet, in the thought secure 

That Caph and Phad could scarce go wrong 

While Gnoster clocks beat staunch and strong. 

A thousand clocks ! But for setting them going 
The village a terrible tax was owing. 
Not to mention the cost and care 
Of keeping them all in good repair; 
For the clock-tinker's trade, all up and down. 
Was one of the very best in town. 

There was the clock on the great town-hall. 
Frowning over its spike-toothed wall. 
It made the base for a liberty-pole. 
Whose crest meant, Everybody had stole 
Somebody's cap, and gilded it so 
That the owner never his own could know. 
Hugging the dial with bent arm bone 
Sat a figure of Justice, asleep in stone; 
Her broken sword had been crooked, at best ; 
In one of her scales was a hornet's nest ; 
And the bandage over her stony eyes. 
What with the weather, and what with the flies, 
A pair of gold spectacles you would think, 
With one eye screwed in a pleasant wink. 

There was the clock at the factory yard. 
Ticking and clicking sharp and hard. 



i64 THE CLOCKS OF GNOSTER-TOWN 

With a dingy little iron face, 

And a bell that banged the hours apace. 

The dial was flat, the figures were lean 

As it" halt-starved — all cheap and mean ; 

And a timid flower, in a chink forlorn, 

The hands had scissored and dropped in scorri. 

On an ancient, somewhat ruined building 
Was a college clock ; no paint or gilding. 
Stern and classic, dreary and dread, 
And the ivy on it was dead — all dead. 
Some cherubs were sculptured around in places, 
But the moss was growing on their faces, 
And the dial was propped by an angel which 
Had been clipped in the wings to fit its niche. 
In the old stone belfrv's chinks and loops. 
With coo and flutter the soft white troops 
Of the doves were just beginning to come. 
With a breath of purity and home. 

Hundreds such secular ones he saw. 
But the great church clocks laid down the law, 
Throned on the stone cathedral's tower, 
A huge old time-piece thundered the hour. 
Its face like a face in a mask appeared. 
For above, it scowled, and below, it leered. 
The dial figures were shrunken men, 
And Peter's keys made the X for ten. 
The hour-hand clawed as an invitation 
Beckoning every tribe and nation, 
But a trick of perspective made you suppose 



THE CLOCKS OF GNOSTER-TOWN 165 

The finger was laid aside of the nose. 

The wheels all creaked and groaned as they went ; 

It would soon run down, that was evident. 

Close on the great cathedral's toes 
A spick-span little building rose, 
With a door like the arch of a Roman nose. 
Its Gothic windows were stained so thick 
That scant was the light that could through them prick 
Around on the spires were a dozen clocks, 
As though they had settled there in flocks — 
A brood from its neighbor's single tower ; 
And whenever the old clock struck the hour. 
These little gilt ones with all their power 
Chimed hurriedly in. They were all so made 
That lively Italian tunes they played, 
And odd little figures, all arrayed 
In patch- work petticoats, trotted out 
(Moved by machinery, no doubt). 
And bobbed, and trotted in again. 
Every time that the hands said when. 
In place of Peter's keys for ten 
Was a fat St. Timothy, going to take 
A little wine for his stomach's sake. 

Up a street that was always choked with people 
Was a great, thick clock, on a great, thick steeple. 
'T was a wooden building, big and bare, 
With not much light, but plenty of air, 
And a dead-earnest look, as if the man 
That made it had understood his plan. 



i66 THE CLOCKS OF GNOSTER-TOWN 

'T was a thumping, whacking clock, that would chase 

All sensitive birds away from the place, 

And it seemed to have struck itself red in the face. 

One clock, on a building of colors various, 
Had beside it a statue of St. Arius. 
The dial-face seemed made of shell, 
It shifted its changeable hues so well. 
Its hgure three had been whittled away, 
And it wore a smile which seemed to say 
That all was sweet and nothing vile. 
And the universe made of sugar and style ; 
That this hitherto troublesome mortal coil 
Could be made quite smooth with honey and oil. 
'T was really a little hard to say, 
In spite of its air of being au fait^ 
Exactly what was its time of day ; 
Its pointers were stretched so far from the dial, 
That you gave it up, on the second trial, 
For you saw at once it depended rather 
Which side you stood, and how near it, whether 
The hand and a figure fell together. 

But a positive clock, on a new French school. 
Seemed to pride itself it was no such fool 
To go groping around to follow the sun : 
Why, who could prove there was any sun ? 
So its hands were nailed at half-past one. 
And its wheels, all dust, in a crust of rust. 
Were bound not to budge till 't was proved they 
must. 



THE CLOCKS OF GNOSTER-TOWN 167 

Well, besides these and hundreds more. 
Each man had a watch, and over his door 
A family clock, and folks do say 
That many a soul kept hidden away 
In a secret pocket, innerly sewed, 
A private watch that he never showed, 
Which the maker and giver had begged might be 
Kept with the great sun to agree. 
But nobody trusted to these — not one. 
It was too much trouble to take the sun, 
And, besides, it would bring on knocks and shocks 
From the public to differ with the clocks. 
So by them they ate, drank, rose, and slept, 
Blessed and cursed, rejoiced and wept. 

And every clock thought: " Ho! my chime 
Keeps the great world in tune and time ! " 
And every church thought: " Ho! my tower 
Points upward, motionless, hour by hour — ■ 
Aims ever the same with steadfast power ! " 
And little they knew, as they watched the blue, 
That round with the plump old earth they flew, 
Eternally shifting to somewhere new ; 
Till there was n't a star in the dusted fire. 
Eastern or western, lower or higher. 
But had blinked along each silly spire. 

So Yunus, the small man, bald and brown, 
Entered this clock-ridden Gnoster-town. 
His watch ran well ; 't was a gift from the king; 
A quaint, old-fashioned sort of thing. 



i68 THE CLOCKS OF GNOSTER-TOWN 

With a rough and wrinkled leathern case, 

As if it copied from his face 

The parchment wrinkles there, well-earned, 

The spectrum-lines where life had burned. 

It seemed with salt-brine crusted dim, 

But safe within the rusty rim 

Its bright, clean wheels ran true and trim, 

And steadily by the steady sun 

With cheery tick their race went on. 

No need had he that another tell 

The hour which the deep sky told so well. 

For still was the rough-faced watch kt-pt true 

By the golden furrow across the blue. 

Through the gate and up the street 
Trod Yunus with unresting feet. 
'T was three o'clock; he was belated; 
In Gnoster dinner never waited. 
But lo ! he stops in dumb amaze : 
The swarm of clocks confronts his gaze. 
Some ticked loud, and some ticked soft ; 
One seemed to wheeze, another coughed ; 
And their thousand hands gave out that soon 
Their thousand throats would iiellow noon. 

Then Yunus saw, what dazed him more. 
That each man motionless stood bv his door, 
Holding his watch in his open hand. 
As a carved tobacconist's man might stand, 
Waiting breathlessly to see 
If his time with the great town-clocks agree. 



THE CLOCKS OF GNOSTER-TOWN 169 

Then a silent laugh just pushed its way 
Over Yunus' face of wrinkled clay, 
Like a gleam of sun on a cloudy day. 
And he asked of a citizen standing near, 
" Pray, which is the standard time-piece here ? " 
" Oh ! well, there 's a many of 'em," quoth he, 
" So we strike an average, and agree 
Once a week, by majority. 
If some seem getting rather slow. 
Nor any progressive zeal can show, 
We touch 'em up a little, you know ; 
And if some are ahead, and seem to lack 
Conservative sense, we set 'em back." 

Then Yunus stammered : " Should n't you say 
That this was rather a dubious way ? 
And don't you really happen to know 
That your time is at least three hours too slow ? " 

The man winked wildly with both his eyes 
In a kind of horrified surprise. 
Gasped once or twice like a shower-bathed wight, 
Then, utterly speechless, took to flight. 

And then to a boy : " My little lad. 
Are these Gnoster people all stark mad ? 
Those clocks are three hours too slow ! " he 

said. 
But the frightened urchin screamed and ran. 
And running he screamed that here was a man 
Who doubted and flouted the Gnoster clocks. 
And forth the populace rushed in flocks. 



ijo THE CLOCKS OF GNOSTER-TOWN 

With threat and curse and club, pell-mell, 
All eager to rout the infidel. 

Well, Yunus thought that his watch was right ; 
But, rather than make a scene, or fight, 
He hid himself till the wrath died down, 
Then hired him a lodging in Gnoster-town. 
Yet he never could snatch a quiet walk 
But the streets were hissing with muttered talk; 
The urchins followed him with stones, 
The elders filled the air with groans, 
As thev watched, those steady streets along, 
The wretch who thought their clocks were wrong. 

Then Yunus, taking himself to task, 
Began to pluck his beard, and ask, 
" O heretic, O hapless wight ! 
Can a thousand be wrong, and one be right ? 
O Yunus, Yunus ! they must be true. 
For there 's more of them than there is of you I 

Ofttimes he thought he would climb, next cbv. 
To that mountain summit, high aw;\y, 
Still, unvisited, cold, severe. 
Like a soul that is far from earth, and near 
To the starry spaces, vast and clear. 
*' And there, lift up alone," thought be, 
** That heaven's true hour mine eyes m?y see. 
A dial I will build for me ; 
A marble cube, all carven square, 
With a silver gnomon, white and fair, 
Down which the good sun, calm and sure. 



THE CLOCKS OF GNOSTER-TOWN 171 

Shall point the hours with finger pure. 

And power to my life that light shall bring 

To beat with the wide world's rhythmic swing." 

But more and more it seemed to him 
That his own conviction was a whim. 
And yet, as it fell out, ere long. 
In spite of their being a thousand strong, 
His lonely thought was right, they wrong. 

For weeks he slept when his own watch said 
*T was the proper time for going to bed. 
And he waked at the kiss of the dawn's first beams, 
While the Gnoster people were deep in dreams. 

At first it was a pleasant thing 
To hear th^ dawn's first preluding, 
Till the tinkle of starlight died away. 
And the golden trumpet-blast of day, 
Clanging all up the eastern gray, 
Broke on a hollow, silent world; 
And to see the banneret flowers unfurled 
From the battlements of the turf, and own 
A new earth, lit for him alone. 
His eyes were clear, his soul all free 
To stand at Nature's mother-knee, 
And greet, with reverent forehead bare. 
His brothers of the sky and air. 

But slowly he had lost that tone ; 
'T was something still and ghostly grown. 
And dull, to be up so long alone; 
A little chilly, too, withal. 



172 THE CLOCKS OF GNOSTER-TOWN 

While each long shadow seemed a pall ; 
And being of too weak a mood 
To feed on Nature as a food, 
It turned him somewhat faint, at last, 
To wait till the village broke its fast. 
So the hollow goneness, hunger-lined, 
His little courage undermined. 
He gave it up, abjured, confessed, 
Took him a business, made much pelf, 
Laid by his watch on a dusty shelf, 
And kept his squints at the sun to himself; 
Even gained a place from the orthodox 
As winder to one of the public clocks. 

So for many a day it ran ; 
He had changed his time, but it changed the man. 
There were flesh-pots plenty and stoups of wine, 
But no more solitudes divine — 
No gaze towards the mountain height afar — ' 
No friendship with the beckoning star. 

" All very well," you '11 say, and take 
The ground, " What difference does it make 
What hour we eat, or sleep, or wake ? " 
But the Lord of Mhundus thought not so. 
He had observed, with inward woe. 
That, what with tobacco, wealth, and rum. 
And natural heaviness with some. 
Great sloth his realm had overcome. 
So an edict, which was framed to fix 
The rising hour at half-past six. 



THE CLOCKS OF GNOSTER-TOWN 173 

Throughout the land he caused to go ; 
And then, the law's success to know, 
He took a trip incognito. 

You guess the sequel. Happening round 
At Gnoster after nine, he found 
The village sunk in sleep profound — 
One choral snore the only sound ; 
Save where, o'erhead, the clocks, sedate, 
Stupid and solemn, little and great. 
Went ticking on, three hours too late. 

The royal wrath was deep and wide: 
He called a magician to his side, 
Who swift his hocus-pocus plied, 
And laid a thrice-inwoven spell 
On the Gnoster sleepers, deep and well. 
Not a soul of them waked forevermore. 
And some who are versed in ancient lore 
Say when it thunders you hear them snore. 

Ah ! if only Yunus had held his own. 
Though they were a thousand and he alone ! 
For had he been up, that morning bland, 
He, faithful alone to the king's command, 
Had risen a duke by the royal hand. 
But he let it be as it was to be. 
And was doomed with the great majority. 

All the king's sages then searched to see 
How in the world it could possibly be. 
When the noon was so simple a thing to find, 
That a town should stay three hours behind. 



174 THE CLOCKS OF GNOSTER-TOWN 

It was found thfv had fetched the time of day 
From a place three hundred leagues awav — 
An hour too slow, of course, nor thought 
Of getting their own from the skv as they ought. 
Then a timid bird, a poor scared thing, 
Flying on panic-stricken wing 
Past the clock on the great church tower, 
Brushed back its hand another hour ; 
And at last, bv their average method blind, 
Thev had crept the third long hour behind. 

To finish the story, let me say 
What the court preacher preached next day. 

** Don't borrow a creed from other people, 
Nor hang most faith on the stoutest steeple. 
Look up for vour law, but oh ! look higher 
Than the hands on any human spire. 
If ten think alike, and you think alone, 
That never proves 't is ten to one 
Thev are right, you wrong; for truth, you see, 
Is not a thing of majority. 
It never can make you false, them true. 
That there 's more of them than there is of you : 
If your touch is on Truth's garment's hem, 
There is more of you than a world of them. 
'T is not alone in the Orient region 
That a certain hero's name is Legion. 
Nor was it onlv for once to be 

That the whole herd together ran down to the 
sea. 



THE CLOCKS OF GNOSTER-TOWN 175 I 

Your zenith for no man else is true-, I 

Your beam from the sun comes alone to you ; J 

And the thought the great God gave your brain, I 

Is your own for the world, or the world 's in vain." | 

Horae pereunt et imputantur. 



THE LOST BIRD 

What cared she for the free hearts ? She would com- 
fort 

The prisoned one : 

What recked I of the wanton other singers ? 
She sang for me alone — 
Was all my own, my own ! 

But when they loaded me with heavier fetters, 

And chained I lay. 
How could she know I longed to reach her window? 

Athirst the livelong day, 

At eve she fled away. 

Still stands her cage wide open at the casement, 

In sun and rain. 
Though years have gone, and rust has thicklv gath- 
ered, — 

My watching all in vain ; 

She will not come again. 

Against its wires I strum with idle fingers 

From morn to noon ; 
I swing the door with loitering touch, and listen 

To hear that old-time tune. 

Sweet as the soul of June. 



THE LOST BIRD 177 

My bird, my silver voice that cheered my prison, 

Hushed, lost to me : 
And still I wait for death, in chains, forsaken, 

(Soon may the summons be !) 

But she is free. 

— " Is free ? " 

Nay, in the palace porches caught and hanging. 
Who says 't is gay. 

The song the false prince hears ? who says her sing- 
ing. 

From day to summer day. 
Grieves not her heart away ? 

But when my dream comes true in that last sleeping. 

And death makes free. 
Against the blue shall snowy wings come sweeping, 

My bird flown back to me. 

Mine for eternity ! 



SUMMER RAIN 

I SAID, " Blue heaven " (Oh, it was beautiful !) 

"Send me a tent to shut me to myself: 

I am all lonely for my soul, that wanders 

Wear}-, bewildered, beckoned by thv depths; 

Thy white, round clouds, great bubbles of creamy 

snow ; 
Thy luscious sunshine, like some ripe, gold fruit ; 
Thy songs of birds, and wind warm with the flowers.'* 

And there swept down (Oh, it was beautiful I) 

A tent of silver rain, that fell like a veil 

Shutting me in to think all quiet thoughts. 

And feel the vibrant thrill of shadowv wings 

That fluttered, checking their swift flight, and hear, 

Though with no syllable of earthly music, 

A voice of melodv unutterable. 



THE BELLOWS-BOY 

I BLOW the organ at St. Timothy's. 
Did you know 't was not the master, after all, 
(I used to think so, too) that speaks the great 
Sweet sounds ? He only beckons at the keys. 
And God's winds come and sing for him ; while L 
I draw the great winds in from up the air. 
'T is hard, I tell you ! Sometimes they hold back, 
And make me tug and strain to draw them in. 
But then they always come : all except once. 
When I forgot to do my work. 

You see, 
'T was a wild night, and after church was done. 
The dear old voices had been battling hard. 
Near drowned in storm and sea, and had got forth 
Out of the roar and whirl, and on the beach 
Lay panting, while the waves died into sobs. 
Leaving them lying, watching the soft foam. — 
I fell to dreaming with them, listening 
How the blue water plashed, quiet and far, 
Till, of a sudden, a horrible, drawn wail. 
Then silence, out of which I started, dazed. 
At a fierce red face and raging whisper, " Blow ! " 



i8o THE BELLOWS-BOY 

They took mv work away, for that ; but soon 
I begged and begged it back again, and now 
I try to tug so hard as not to hear. 

Sometimes I creep round nights, when the choir is 
gone. 
And stealthily unlock the carved oak doors, 
To flatten mv hand along the ivory keys. 
As smooth and chill as ice. Thev will not speak, — 
The smooth white lips, yet always 1 hear tunes, 
Back in the empty dark, and over me 
In the gold pipes : it may be my own thoughts. 
Playing at music. One I always hear 
That hangs in the dark like a great white flower, and 

there 
It grows and fades. 

For, once, the minister 
(Him with the great high forehead), Christmas Dav, 
Walked down the alley, and stopped, and spoke to 

me 
(Faith ! but I shook, though, when his steady hand 
Stayed on mv head a minute), and he said 
That even the master, and he, and every one — 
Even the beautiful people in the choir — 
Only did work like mine, moved hands or lips. 
While the music all was God's, and came from 

Him. 



THE BELLOWS-BOY i8i 

So, ever since, it has come into my tunes, 
That maybe in that world I can make sounds 
Like the great, sweet ones, and may have white keys 
All of my own, and not so cold and dumb. 
Nights, when I touch them ! 



THE NEW YEAR 

Go, minister of God, 

To drowsy pews where nod 

Your flock, who know so well 

The empty tale vou tell ! 

Some morning go and dare 

Speak what your real thoughts are, — 

See them awake, and stare ! 

Go, father, to your sons, — 

Yea, to those milder ones. 

The daughters, soft and meek ; 

And after sermon speak 

No half-truths, told with tact, 

But what you think is fact. 

Go, wiclder of the pen ! 

^Vrite for your fellow-men 

What you haye hinted true 

In whispers to a few. 

But you must look to see 
What present loss 't will be ? 
Ah, wielder of the pen, 
They will not praise you then ! 
Ah, minister of — Whom ? — 
There will be sudden room 



THE NEW YEAR 183 

In c\ erv velvet pew, 
It" vou but once speak true. 
Sh.imo on vou, cowards all ! 
Is God's groat throne to tall 
Except vou prop it round 
With vour poor emptv sound ? 
Think ve vou '11 ne'er be ted 
Unless, bv Satan led. 
You bid vour stones be bread ? 
You think the uni\erse 
Goes on from bad to worse. 
And with some glittering bait 
You '11 coax it from its tate ? 
You think all truth was given 
To vou tVoni cautious heaven. 
To keep beneath vour thumb. 
And dole out, crumb by crumb, 
Lest haplv, if once known. 
The world were overthrown ? 
The world — O faithless clod ! 
Who made it, — vou, or God ? 
Ah, well, this seems His wav : 
He made the cowards, too; 
He leaves the false with true — 
He leaves it till the dav 
When suddenly men shall say, 
" What ! you were one, — and vou ? 
It was no scattered few ? 
Whv not, if we all knew, 



iS4 THK Nl W VI A R 

H.»\c told each other so. 
Openly, long ago ? " 

Yes : let us understand, 

Now, on whose side we stand,— 

The poor old n\an's at Rome, 

Good but to feeblv t"oan\ 

At each new torch men light, 

Fncroaching on his night ; 

Or theirs, who Hnd Ciod's way 

H\ no dark lantern's lav, 

Hut ill the light ot" dav. 

Of all the pillars fair 
Holding the world in air. 
Canst thou one shaft espv 
Based oi\ a craftv lie ? 
Is Init one colunin there 
A sham, an empty shell ? 
Not one ? rhen hew awav, 
All gvH^d right arms that may: 
No falsehood we can fell 
Holds up (»od's citadel. 
For every cheat that falls. 
The hrmer stand the walls. 
For all that *s cleared awav 
0( rubbish and decay. 
The sounder stand and shine 
The square-hewn walls divine. 



'IffK NKW YKAR 185 

O younger »ouJ» ! for you 
T is ea*y to be true. 
Dear spirit, far or near 
Let thii ncw-ri«cn year 
Jic a new birth to thcc ; 
Stand forth — be wholly free. 
Count not what it *hall co»t, — 
Given for the world — not lost, 
Deep down within thy heart, 
If thou dost feel it start, — 
Some longing to be frf:(:^ 
Some fresh fidelity, 
Some blush upon the cheek 
For all the past, so weak ; 
Some manlier will to dare, — 
If thou dost feel it stir. 
Grieve not the messenger : 
Thy better angel there 
Thou hearest, unaware^ 



THE TRUANT 

" Sent out, was I, to turn the sod ? 

What waste of such a day ! 
Who would not, under blue like that, 

Fling the old spade awav ? 
If they but knew the ripples' plash, 

And loved the lark as I ! 
How could one dig, and half the time 

Gaze at the luscious sky ? 
Better to watch my dipping kite 

Go swaying up the cloud, 
Or mock the tireless thrush, or shout 

My own free songs aloud." 

So half the day he gazed, and wished 

The tugging kite to be. 
And wondered if that endless sky 

Was not eternity. 
Or, tossing snowv pebbles out 

Beyond the lake's gray rim. 
He stood to watch the ripple-ranks 

Come ringing back to him. 

Was it, I wonder, loitering there 
Only an idle boy ? 



THE TRUANT 187 

Or was it a poet, claiming so 

His heritage of joy? 
Who watched above the rounded world 

His fancy float and swim, 
Or tossed his dreams out, watching men's 

Brave deeds ring back to him. 



SPRING 

When is it Spring? When spirits rise, 
Pure crocus-buds, where the snow dies ; 
When children plav outdoors till dark ; 
When the sap trickles up the hark; 
When bits of blue skv flit and sing, 
Playing at birds — then is it Spring? 

When is it Spring ? When the bee hums ; 
When through the opened window comes 
The breeze, and summer-license claims 
To swing and toss the picture frames ; 
When the walk dries ; the robins call ; 
The brown hens doze by the sunny wall, 
One foot drawn up to warm, or sing. 
With half-filmed eyes — then is it Spring ? 

Nay, each might prove a treacherous sign : 
But when old waters seem new wine ; 
When all our mates are half divine ; 
When love comes easier than hate ; 
When we have no more shrugs at Fate, 
But think sometimes of God, and late 
Our swiftest serving seems to be-, 
When bright ways numberless we see, 



SPRING 189 

And thoughts spring up, and hopes run free, 
And wild new dreams are all on wing, 
Till we must either fly or sing 
With riotous life — be sure 't is Spring. 



TRANQUILLITY 

Weary, and marred with care and pain 
And bruising days, the human brain 
Draws wounded inward, — it might be 
Some delicate creature of the sea, 
That, shuddering, shrinks its lucent dome, 
And coils its azure tendrils home, 
And folds its filmy curtains tight 
At jarring contact, e'er so light ; 
But let it float away all free. 
And feel the buoyant, supple sea 
Among its tinted streamers swell, 
Again it spreads its gauzy wings. 
And, waving its wan fringes, swings 
With rhythmic pulse its crystal bell. 

So let the mind, with care o'erwrought. 
Float down the tranquil tides of thought : 
Calm visions of unending years 
Beyond this little moment's fears ; 
Of boundless regions far from where 
The girdle of the azure air 
Binds to the earth the prisoned mind. 
Set free the fancy, till it find 
Beyond our world a vaster place 



TRANQUILLITY 191 

To thrill and vibrate out through space, — 

As some auroral banner streams 

Up through the night in pulsing gleams, 

And floats and flashes o'er our dreams ; 

There let the whirling planet fall 

Down — down, till but a glimmering ball, 

A misty star : and dwindled so. 

There is no room for care, or woe. 

Or wish, apart from that one Will 

That doth the worlds with music fill. 



IN A FAR COUNTRY 

Once, in a dream, in a bleak, sea-blown land, 
A man wreck-stranded many a month before 
Saw for a moment — not the broken oar. 

Nor sand-sunk keel ; nor wild men that would stand 

With uncouth gibberish on either hand 

If he walked forth, or peered about the door 
Where stretched he lay on his rude hut's beach- 
floor; 

Nor heard the dull waves fretting at the sand : 

But heard once more, this blessed dream within, 
The mother-tongue heard not these many years, 
And old familiar motions had their power ; 
Saw, for once more, the faces of his kin. 

And took their hands, half-laughing, half in tears, 
And it was home, home, home, for this one 
hour. 



THE WONDERFUL THOUGHT 

It comes upon me in the woods, 
Of all the days, this day in May : 

When wind and rain can never think 
Whose turn 't is now to have its way. 

It finds me as I lie along, 

Blinking up through the swaying trees, 
Half wondering if a man who reads 

" Blue sky" in books that color sees, — 

So fathomless and pure : as if 

All loveliest azure things have gone 

To heaven that way, — the flowers, the sea, - 
And left their color there alone. 

Hark ! leaning on each other's arms. 
The pines are whispering in the breeze, 

Whispering, — then hushing, half in awe 
Their legends of primeval seas. 

The wild things of the wood come out, 
And stir or hide, as wild things will. 

Like thoughts that may not be pursued, 
But come if one is calm and still. 



194 THE WONDERFUL THOUGHT 

Deep hemlocks down the gorge shut in 
Their caves with hollow shadow filled. 

Where little feathered anchorites 
Behind a sunlit lattice build. 

And glimmering through that lace of boughs, 
Dancing, while they hang darker still. 

Along the restful river shines 

The restless light's incessant thrill : 

As in some sober, silent soul. 

Whose life appears a tranquil stream, 

Through some unguarded rift you catch 
The wildest wishes, all agleam. 

But to mv thought — so wonderful ! 

I know if once 't were told, all men 
Would feel it warm at heart, and life 

Be more than it had ever been. 

'T would make these flowerless woods laugh out 

With every garden-color bright, 
Where only, now, the dogwood hangs 

Its scattered cloud of ghostly white. 

Those birds would hold no more aloof: — 
How know they I am here, so well ? 

'T is yon woodpecker's warning note i 
He is their seer and sentinel. 



THE WONDERFUL THOUGHT 195 

They use him, but his faithfulness 
Perchance in human fashion pay, — 

Laugh in their feathers at his voice, 
And ridicule his stumbling way. 

That far-ofF flute-note — hours in vain 
I 've followed it, so shy and fleet ; 

But if I found him, well I know 

His song would seem not half so sweet. 

The swift, soft creatures, — how I wish 
They 'd trust me, and come perch upon 

My shoulders ! Do they guess that then 
Their charm would be forever gone ? 

But still I prate of sight and sound; 

Ah, well, 't is always so in rhyme ; 
The idle fancies find a voice. 

The wise thought waits — another time. 



TO "THE RADICAL" 

1871 

After sleep, the waking ; 

After night, dawn breaking; 

After silence long, 

A burst of song. 

We knew thou wert not gone, 

To leave us without champion — 

Our first free voice 'mid servile tongues 

And secret sneers and bigot wrongs : 

With good Thor-hammer beating down 

The tyrant lie with tinsel crown ; 

With message, now unsealed again, 

Of love to God in love to men. 

Who calls thy manner cold as snow ? 

Can pure spring have the summer's glow. 

Or crocus-buds like roses blow ? 

Who says the dawn is vague and gray ? 

So clear, the sight can reach away 

To stainless peaks that shine afar 

And dim beyond the morning star. 

Choose who may the summer noon, 

Longing to be let alone, — 

Force unstrung, and vigor gone. 



TO "THE RADICAL" 197 

Welcome the sweet breath of Spring ! 
Morning air to tempt the wing ; 
Distance, cool and clear and still, 
For the eye to pierce at will. 
Welcome, O vanward voice! 
Sound on ! Be strong ! Rejoice ! 
And so, in thy fresh history. 
Foretell the world-old mystery. 
Hinting what is to be 
For us, as now for thee. 
After sleep, the waking; 
After night, dawn breaking ; 
After silence long, 
A burst of song. 



THE INVISIBLE 

If there is naught but what we see, 

What is the wide world worth to me ? 

But is there naught save what we see ? 

A thousand things on everv hand 

My sense is numb to understand : 

I know we eddy round the sun ; 

When has it dizzied any one ? 

I know the round worlds draw from far. 

Through hollow systems, star to star ; 

But who has e'er upon a strand 

Of those great cables laid his hand ? 

What reaches up from room to room 

Of chambered earth, through glare or gloom. 

Through molten flood and fier\' blast, 

And binds our hurraing feet so fast ? 

'T is the earth-mother's love, that well 

Will hold the motes that round her dwell : 

Through granite hills you feel it stir 

As lightly as through gossamer: 

Its grasp unseen by mortal eves, 

Its grain no lens can analyze. 



THE INVISIBLE 199 

If there is naught but what we see, 
The friend I loved is lost to me : 
He fell asleep ; who dares to say 
His spirit is so far away ? 
Who knows what wings are round about ? 
These thoughts — who proves but from without 
They still are whispered ? Who can think 
They rise from morning's food and drink ! 
These thoughts that stream on like the sea, 
And darkly beat incessantly 
The feet of some great hope, and break, 
And only broken glimmers make. 
Nor ever climb the shore, to lie 
And calmly mirror the far sky. 
And image forth in tranquil deeps 
The secret that its silence keeps. 

Because he never comes, and stands 
And stretches out to me both hands. 
Because he never leans before 
The gate, when I set wide the door 
At morning, nor is ever found 
Just at my side when I turn round, 
Half thinking I shall meet his eyes, 
From watching the broad moon-globe rise, — 
For all this, shall I homage pay 
To Death, grow cold of heart, and say, 
" He perished, and has ceased to be ; 



200 THE INVISIBLE 

Another comes, but never he " ? 
Nay, by our wondrous being, nay ! 
Although his face I never see 
Through all the infinite To Be, 
I know he lives and cares for me. 



A DRIFTING CLOUD 

Born of the shadows that it passes through, 
Incessantly becoming and destroyed, 

Its form unchanged, its substance ever new, 
Builded from its own largess to the void j 

Of steady purpose innerly aware. 

Yet blindly borne upon the streaming air, — 

Giving itself away, distributing 

Its own abundant heart in splendid showers, 
But not impoverished, since its losses bring 

Perpetual renewing all the hours : 
Drifting, sunlit or shadowed, to the sea, — 
O cloud, thou hast a human destiny ! 



A RKTl Y 

To the mother of the world. 
Not tor help or light or grace, 
EUsclv I tor comfort came ; 
And I brv^ught mv craven fears. 
Late amends of useless tears, 
Hrvnight mv stumbling feet Sv> lame, 
Hopes with wean* pinions furled, 
Ijlven- longing unattained, 
AH mv love with selt'-love stained,— 
ToM then\ to her grave, mild face. 

And the nu^ther of the world 
Sp^ke, and answxrrd unto me. 
In the hrvv^k that i>ast me purled j 
In the bluehirxl's heavenly hue, 
When bevond his downwar\i swerxe 
I'p he glanced, a sweep of blue ; 
In the sunshine's shifting spr»y. 
Drifted in beneath the tree 
\Vhere 1 shelterevU lest its tl^x^d 
There outside should drv^wn my blood i 
In the cloud-pearl's melting curve ; 
In the little ^.nloa^us thrill 
Trembling frv>m each blossom-bcU } 



A rkim:y 203 

In the silence of the sky. 
And the thoughts that from it fell, 
Floating as a snowllake will, — 
So the mother answeieil n\e : 

" Child ! it is not thine to see 
Why at all thy life should be, 
Wherefore thou must thus abide, 
Foiled, repulsed, unsatisfied. 
Thou hast not to prove thy right 
To the earlh-rooni and the light. 
Tiiou hast not to justify 
Thought of mine to human eye. 
I have borne thee ! Trust to me ! 
Strength and help are in thy deed ; 
Comfort thou shalt scori\ to need. 
Careless what shall come to thee. 
Look but what thy work shall be.** 



THE SCHOOLHOUSE WINDOWS 

Hope builded herself a palace 

At the heart of the oak-roofed town. 

And out of its airy windows 
Her happy eyes looked down : 

Her eyes — the beautiful eves of Hope — 

All day were shining there, 
And the morning heard her merry songs 

Ring out on the fresh sea-air. 

Full many a changing face has she 
For the changing earth below, 

And to each the magical windows 
A different picture show. 

As when you stand in the twilight 

And watch through the darkling pane, 

Till the image of your face appears 
Against the fading plain, 

And a wider world is opened, — 

The ghost of the firelit room 
That wavers and glows and glimmers 

Beyond in the hollow gloom,— 



THE SCHOOLHOUSE WINDOWS 205 

Till, out through the mirrored phantoms, 

The stars and the spectral trees 
Are the dim and columned corridors 

Of wonderful palaces, 

So each of the childish faces 

That looks out into the air. 
Through an image of itself must see 

That colors all things there ; 

And the hill and the azure water 

Can never be twice the same. 
For the hue of the seeing eye will tint 

Its vision in dust or flame. 

Our lives are but what we see them ; 

Bright, if the eye-beams are : — 
Not what shines in, but what shines out, 

Makes every world a star. 

So when at the schoolhouse windows 

They stand, the guileless wise, 
I peer o'er the clustered shoulders. 

And see with their own bright eyes. 

Then the vanishing mists of morning 

Like airy portals ope. 
And the hills that lift their slopes bc'ond 

Are the boundless realms of Hope. 



206 THE SCHOOLHOUSE WINDOWS 

The slim ships, out of the western haze, 

Come moving, dim and still. 
As it" the sights ot' the solemn sea 

Had awed them like a spell. 

And as a quiet, land-locked bav 

Their schooldavs seem to be. 
And they long, through the gate of golden years. 

To pass to the world's wide sea. 

Then we look from the sunny windows 

On the lives that plod below. 
Who guess not how, to us, their wavs 

'Twixt blooming gardens go ; 

'i 

And we see how everv toiling life 

May kx^k serene and fair. 
If the soul but climb above itself 

And gaze from the upper air. 

But the master, after school is done. 

And the children are all awav. 
He reads in the window-panes the thoughts 

That have winged from them all dav. 

As he watches the loud troop homeNvard, 

Till the pattering feet are still. 
He reads the innocent musings 

Thit the cnstal tablets till. 



THE SCHOOLHOUSE WINDOWS 207 

There one had leaned and listened, 

And heard in the empty air 
Invisible armies marching 

To the soundless trumpet's blare. 

And one had caught the motion 

Of the great world round the sun, 
Till he felt on his face the rush of space 

As the whirling Earth-ball spun. 

The dream and the aspiration; 

The glimpse of the higher home ; 
The noble scorn of the world that is, 

And the worship of that to come : 

The thirst for a life diviner. 

And the sigh of self-despair. 
That rose through the blue to the gate of heaven 

And was answered like a prayer. 

Ah, for him the panes are crowded 

With the volumes of such lore, 
And the children will catch, to-morrow, 

The glimmers of days before ; 

Till the dry and dreary lesson 

In luminous letters shines, 
Where the magical schoolhouse windows 

Have written between the lines. 



2o8 THE SCHOOLHOUSE WINDOWS ! 

Bur the brightest of all the windows 

In the palace of Hope so fair. 
Are the eves where merr\' thoughts climb up 

And beckon each other there. 

I 
There are clear and sea-blue windows 

Behind whose pencilled bars 
The bright hours are all sunshine. 

And the dark ones lit with stars: 

And there are shady casements. 

That gentle secrets keep. 
And vou seek in vain through the clouded p*nc 

If the spirit wake or sleep : 

And oriels gray, where, cool and still. 

The soul leans out to see. 
As you shape for the prince the sword and crowi 

Of the king that is to be. I 

The vears of the unknown future 

Even now are on the wing. 
Like a flight of beautiful singing birds 

From the distance hastening. 

O children, O blind musicians. 
With powers bevond your ken. 

Moulding, but guessing not, the souls 
That shall wear vour faces then — 



THE SCHOOLHOUSE WINDOWS 209 

Shall the look be clear with truth, or drear 

And hollow with mocking days ? 
Shall the eyes be sweet with the love of man, 

Or shrunk with the lust of praise ? 

And what, from those future windows. 

Shall the magical pictures be ? — 
The scattered wrecks of fleets of care. 

Or a blessed argosy ? 

Perchance when ye come and stand and muse 
On the years that were half in vain, 

A mist that is not of the ocean born 
May be blurring the window-pane. 

And one may sigh to remember 

The old-time wishes there. 
And the bows of empty promise 

That have broken in the air. 

And some shall wonder and wonder. 

As they think of the days of old, 
How their world from the schoolhouse windows 

Could have looked so bare and cold : 

For the mist that was thick at morning, 
From the noon shall have risen and fled. 

And the air shall be full of fragrance now, 
From the blossoms that it fed. 



iK> THE SCHOOLHOUSE WINDOWS 

O friends, have the paths grown empty ? 

Do the winds play out of tune ? 
Have the earlv gleams ot glon* gone 

From the sober afternoon ? 

Then follow the little footprints 

Out trv^m vour care and pain. 
And the world fa>m the schoolhouse windows 

Will look &1I young again. 

Oh, the never-forgotten schooldays ! 

Whose music, fresh and pure. 
Is woven of hints of songs to come. 

Like a beautiful overture — 

When the spirit had not touched its bounds 

Of weakness or of sin. 
But the nebulous light was round it still 

Of the soul it might have been. 

Oh, the old earth will be Eden, 

Fairer than that of yore. 
When the young hearts all shall grow to be 

What the gvxxl God meant them fc»r! 

We are all but His schoolchildren. 
And earth is our schoolhouse now. 

Where duties are set for lessons — 
Whose wmdows »rc midnight's blue 



THE SCHOOLHOUSE WINDOWS 211 

And out through that starry casement. 
Some night when the skies are clear. 

We shall watch the mists of time lift up 
And the hills of heaven appear. 



A FOOLISH WISH 

Why ncTTvi I seek somr Kinim ^nal! to bear 

Bci\>rr I gv^ " 
Will nvX A hvvst ot" n^>i\lcr souls be here, 

HcA^cn's will tv> 3o : 
Of strvvnjcr lund^s unfiiUni, unAtru^i ? 

sUhr soul ! what nvittrrs mv »iuul 4u>i 

BcKvr 1 gv^ ' 

1 tri<^i to hnd« ttut I mi^t show to them, 

BeKxrr 1 jo, 
Tlie path v\t punrr lors : the Ii^t w»s dim, 

1 «k» iK>t know 
If I h»d touiHi some Kvxprints of the war j 
It t$ tvv» Ute their waniehng tvet to star, 
Betvvr 1 cok 

I wottM haxrr suae the rest s\"tne sooj of cheer. 

Before 1 cvv 
But $«iU the choifv:* nn^ filse ; $ome Vtr of fear, 

Nxne Uni^iin^ woe. 
And it the end I v-Jir.rvot we^xe v^ne chonl 
To IKMt mro thetr hexrts mr Ust wjrm wvvU, 

Betonr 1 gix 



A FOOLISH WISH 213 

I would be satisfied if I might tell, 

Before I go, 
That one warm word, — how I have loved them well. 

Could they but know ! 
And would have gained for them some gleam of 

good ; 
Have sought it long; still seek, — if but I could ! 

Before I go. 

'T is a child's longing, on the beach at play : 

" Before I go," 
He begs the beckoning mother, " Let me stay 

One shell to throw ! " 
'T is coming night ; the great sea climbs the shore, — 
" Ah, let me toss one little pebble more, 

Before I go ! " 



THE SECRET 

A TIDE of sun and song in beauty broke 
Against a bitter heart, where no voice woke 
Till thus it spoke : — 

What was it, in the old time that I know. 
That made the world with inner beauty glow, 
Now a vain show ? 

Still dance the shadows on the grass at play. 
Still move the clouds like great, calm thoughts away. 
Nor haste, nor stay. 

But I have lost that breath within the gale. 
That light to which the davlight was a veil. 
The star-shine pale. 

Still all the summer with its songs is filled. 
But that delicious undertone they held — 
Why is it stilled? 

Then I took heart that I would find again 
The voices that had long in silence lain. 
Nor live in vain. 



THE SECRET 215 

I stood at noonday in the hollow wind, 
Listened at midnight, straining heart and mind 
If I might find ! 

But all in vain I sought, at eve and morn, 
On sunny seas, in dripping woods forlorn. 
Till tired and worn. 

One day I left my solitary tent 
And down into the world's bright garden went, 
On labor bent. 

The dew stars and the buds about my feet 
Began their old bright message to repeat, 
In odors sweet ; 

And as I worked at weed and root in glee. 

Now humming and now whistling cheerily, 

It came to me, — 

The secret of the glory that was fled 
Shone like a sweep of sun all overhead. 
And something said, — 

" The blessing came because it was not sought ; 
There was no care if thou were blest or not : 
The beauty and the wonder all thy thought, — 
Thyself forgot." 



POEMS WRITTEN BETWEEN 
1872 AND 1880 

THE THINGS THAT WILL NOT DIE 

What am I glad will stay when I have passed 
From this dear valley of the world, and stand 

On yon snow-glimmering peaks, and lingering cast 
From that dim land 
A backward look, and haply stretch my hand, 

Regretful, now the wish comes true at last ? 

Sweet strains of music I am glad will be 

Still wandering down the wind, for men will hear 

And think themselves from all their care set free. 
And heaven near 
When summer stars burn very still and clear, 

And waves of sound are swelling like the sea. 

And it is good to know that overhead 

Blue skies will brighten, and the sun will shine, 

And flowers be sweet in many a garden bed. 
And all divine 
(For are they not, O Father, thoughts of thine ? ) 

Earth's warmth and fragrance shall on men be shed. 



THE THINGS THAT WILL NOT DIE 217 

And I am glad that Night will always come, 
Hushing all sounds, even the soft-voiced birds, 

Putting away all light from her deep dome, 
Until are heard 
In the wide starlight's stillness, unknown words. 

That make the heart ache till it find its home. 

And I am glad that neither golden sky, 
Nor violet lights that linger on the hill, 

Nor ocean's wistful blue shall satisfy. 
But they shall fill 
With wild unrest and endless longing still 

The soul whose hope beyond them all must lie. 

And I rejoice that love shall never seem 

So perfect as it ever was to be. 
But endlessly that inner haunting dream 
Each heart shall see 

Hinted in every dawn's fresh purity, 
Hopelessly shadowed in each sunset's gleam. 

And though warm mouths will kiss and hands will 
cling. 
And thought by silent thought be understood, 
I do rejoice that the next hour will bring 
That far-off mood. 
That drives one like a lonely child to God, 
Who only sees and measures everything. 



2i8 THE THINGS THAT WILL NOT DIE 

And it is well that when these feet have pressed 
The outward path from earth, 't will not seem sad 

To them to stay ; but they who love me best 
Will be most glad 
That such a long unquiet now has had, 

At last, a gift of perfect peace and rest. 



A CHILD AND A STAR 

The star, so pure in saintly white, 
Deep in the solemn soul of night, 
With dreams of deathless beauty wed, 
And golden ways that seraphs tread : 
The child — so mere a thing of earth, 
So meek a flower of mortal birth : 
A far-ofF lucent world, so bright. 
Stooping to touch with tender light 
That little gown at evening prayer : 
It seems a condescension rare, — 
Heaven round a common child to glow ! 
Ah ! wiser eyes of angels know 
The star, a toy but roughly wrought ; 
The child, God's own most loving thought. 
Yon evening planet, wan with moons. 
Colossal, 'mid its dim, swift noons, — 
What is it but a bulk of stone. 
Like this gray globe we dwell upon ? 
Down hollow spaces, sightless, chill, 
Its vibrant beams in darkness thrill, 
Till through some window drift the rays 
Where a pure heart looks up and prays; 
And in that silent worshiper. 
The waves of feeling stir and stir. 



220 A CHILD AND A STAR 

And spread in wider rings above, 
To tremble at God's heart of love. 
Though it be kingiicst one of all 
His worlds, *t is but a stony ball : 
What are they all, from sun to sun. 
But dust and stubble, when all 's done ? 
Some heavenly grace it only caught. 
When, like a hint from home, it brought 
To a child's heart one tender thought : 
Itself in that great mystery lost. 
As some bright pebble, idly tost 
Into the darkling sea at night. 
Whose widening ripples, running light, 
Go out into the infinite. 



REVERIE 

Whether *t was in that dome of evening sky, 
So hollow where the few great stars were bright, 

Or something in the cricket's lonely cry, 

Or, farther ofF, where swelled upon the night 
The surf-beat of the symphony's delight. 

Then died in crumbling cadences away — 

A dream of Schubert's soul, too sweet to stay : 

Whether from these, or secret spell within, — 
It seemed an empty waste of endless sea. 

Where the waves mourned for what had never been, 
Where the wind sought for what could never be : 
Then all was still, in vast expectancy 

Of powers that waited but some mystic sign 

To touch the dead world to a life divine. 

Me, too, it filled — that breathless, blind desire; 

And every motion of the oars of thought 
Thrilled all the deep in flashes — sparks of fire 

In meshes of the darkling ripples caught. 

Swiftly rekindled, and then quenched to naught ; 
And the dark held me ; wish and will were none : 
A soul unformed and void, silent, alone. 
And brooded over by the Infinite One. 



IS IT SAFE? 

Two souls, whose bodies sate them on a hill, 
And, beating idly on a stone, one said : 

"Yes, light is good, and air; but were it well 

To burst the walls that keep the Terror out ? 

Let faith, my one great pearl, bide deep in the dark, 

If love, its lustre, will be dulled in the sun. 

See, now: a darkness round us in the world, — 

This tossing world that rides upon the waves ; 

A glimmer overhead ; the wrath and roar 

Of awful waters rushing thunderously. 

Slaves, penned in the pitch-dark hold, shall we go 

wild 
To crush the planks through, mad for light and 

air. 
And drawn in the swirling gulf of that despair? 
Better to wait, and guess the end is good, 
And hope in some great angel at the helm. 
Poring on the mystic words they diopped — 
Those dreaming shipmates, that these many nights 
Have muttered in their dreams and prophesied." 

The other — grim, with eyes of fathomless trust — 
Thus spake : 



IS IT SAFE? 223 

" A darkness round the sparrow's egg ; 

A warm thin wall; within a downy throb — 

A fluttering heart. Strange noises swell, or swoon, 

Outside that amber glimmer arching round. 

The wind rocks bough and nest and mother bird; 

The timid heart waits in a dizzy awe ; 

All things seem rushing like a roaring sea. 

It struggles; shall it dare break through the wall — 

This safe, smooth wall, so wisely built for it — 

And let the unknown Terror in, and die ? 

With chip on chip of tiny crusted bill 

The wall is cleft, and — lo ! on perfumed wings 

The sun leaps in with a laugh ; the dancing leaves 

Hang merrily beckoning, and blossom-boughs 

Nod gayly to the whispering summer air." 



I 



FIVE LIVES 

Five mites of monads dwelt in a round drop 
That twinkled on a leaf by a pool in the sun. 
To the naked eye they lived invisible ; 
Specks, for a world of whom the empty shell 
Of a mustard-seed had been a hollow sky. 

One was a meditative monad, called a sage ; 
And, shrinking all his mind within, he thought: 
"Tradition, handed down for hours and hours. 
Tells that our globe, this quivering crystal world, 
Is slowly dying. What if, seconds hence, 
When I am very old, yon shimmering dome 
Come drawing down and down, till all things end ? " 
Then with a weazen smirk he proudly felt 
No other mote of God had ever gained 
Such giant grasp of universal truth. 

One was a transcendental monad ; thin 
And long and slim in the mind ; and thus he mused : 
" Oh, vast, unfathomable monad-souls ! 
Made in the image " — a hoarse frog croaks from the 

pool — 
" Hark ! 't was some god, voicing his glorious thought 
In thunder music ! Yea, we hear their voice, 



FIVE LIVES 225 

And we may guess their minds from ours, their work. 
Some taste they have like ours, some tendency 
To wriggle about, and munch a trace of scum." 
He floated up on a pin-point bubble of gas 
That burst, pricked by the air, and he was gone. 

One was a barren-minded monad, called 
A positivist ; and he knew positively : 
" There is no world beyond this certain drop. 
Prove me another ! Let the dreamers dream 
Of their faint dreams, and noises from without. 
And higher and lower; life is life enough." 
Then swaggering half a hair's breadth, hungrily 
He seized upon an atom of bug, and fed. 

One was a tattered monad, called a poet ; 
And with shrill voice ecstatic thus he sang: 
" Oh, the little female monad's lips ! 
Oh, the little female monad's eyes : 
Ah, the little, little, female, female monad ! " 

The last was a strong-minded monadess. 
Who dashed amid the infusoria, 
Danced high and low, and wildly spun and dove 
Till the dizzy others held their breath to see. 

But while they led their wondrous little lives 
iEonian moments had gone wheeling by. 
The burning drop had shrunk with fearful speed ; 



ai6 FIVE l.IVKS 

A glistening Him — 't was gone ; the Icat was drv. 
I'hc little ghost of an inaudible squeak 
Was lost to the frog that gv>ggled from his stone \ 
NVho, at the huge, slow tread o( a thoughtful ox 
Coming to drink, stirred sideways fatl\ , plunged, 
Launched backward twice, and all the pool was stilL 



lifL OPLN WINDOW 

My tower was grimly builded, 
With many a Ijolt and bar, 
"And )\<:T<:" \ thouj'hf, " J will kccp my life 
1- rorn the bitter world afar." 

Dark and chill wa8 the stony floor, 

Where nc/c-r a sunbeam lay. 
And the mould crept up on the dreary wall, 

With its ghofjt touch, day by day. 

One morn, in my sullen musings, 

A flutter and cry I heard ; 
And close at the rusty casement 

There clung a frightened bird. 

Then back 1 flung the shutter 
That was never before undone, 

And I kept till it« wings were rested 
The little weary one. 

But in through the open window. 

Which I had forgot to close, 
There had burst a gush of sunshine 

And a summer i>cent of rose. 



228 THE OPKN WINDOW 

Kor all the while I had burrowed 

There in my d\n^' tower, 
Lo ! the birds had sung and the leaves had danced 

From hour to sunny hour. 

And such balm and warmth and beauty 

Came drifting in since then. 
That window still stands open 

And shall ne\cr be shut ak^ain. 



GOOD Nf:ws 

T IS just the day to hear good news : 
The pulses of the world are still ; 

The eager spring's unfolding hues 

Are drowned in floods of sun, that fill 

The golden air, and softly bear 

Deep sleep and silence everywhere. 
No ripple runs along that sea 

Of warm, new grass, but all things wear 
A hush of calm expectancy : 
What is coming to Heart and me ? 

The idle clouds, that work their wills 
In moods of shadow, on the hills ; 
The dusky hollows in the trees, 
Veiled with their sunlit 'broideries ; 
T he gate that has not swung, all day ; 

The dappled water's drowsy gleam; 
The tap of hammers far away. 

And distant voices, like a dream, — 
All seem but visions, and a tone 

Haunts them of tidings they refuse : 
So, all the quiec afternoon, 
Heart and I we sit alone, 

Waiting for some good news. 



230 GOOD NEWS 

Other days had life to spare, 

Tasks to do, and men to meet, 
Trifling wishes, bits of care, 

A hundred ways for ready feet ; 

But this bright day is all so sweet, 
So sweet, 't is sad in its content ; 
As if kind Nature, as she went 
Her happy way, had paused a space. 
Remembered us, and turned her face 

As toward some protest of distress ; 
Waiting till we should find our place 

In the wide world's happiness. 
Nothing stirs but some vague scent, 

A breath of hidden violet — 
The lonely last of odors gone — 

Still lingering from the morning dews, 
As if it were the earth's regret 
For other such bright days that went, 
While Heart and I we sat alone. 

Waiting for our good news. 

What would you have for your good news, 
Foolish Heart, O foolish Heart ? 

Some new freedom to abuse. 
Some old trouble to depart ? 

Sudden flash of snowy wing 

Out of yonder blue, to bring 

Messages so long denied ? 



GOOD NEWS 231 

The old greeting at your side, 
The old hunger satisfied ? 

Nay, the distant will not come; 
To deaf ears all songs are dumb : 

Silly Heart, O silly Heart ! 
From within joy must begin — 

What could help the thing thou art ? 
Nothing draweth from afar, 
The gods can give but what we are. 
Heaven makes the mould, but soon and late 
Man pours the metal — that is Fate. 
We must speak the word we wait. 

And give the gift we die to own. 

Wake, O Heart ! From us alone 
Can come our best good news. 



SUNDAY 

Not a dread cavern, hoar with damp and mould, 
Where I must creep, and in the dark and cold, 

Offer some awful incense at a shrine 

That hath no more divine 
Than that 't is far from life, and stern, and old ; 

But a bright hilltop in the breezy air, 

Full of the morning freshness high and clear, 

Where I mav climb and drink the pure, new day. 

And see where winds away 
The path that God would send me, shining fair. 



PEACE 

'T IS not in seeking, 

'T is not in endless striving, 

Thy quest is found : 
Be still and listen; 
Be still and drink the quiet 

Of all around. 

Not for thy crying, 

Not for thy loud beseeching. 

Will peace draw near : 
Rest with palms folded ; 
Rest with thine eyelids fallen 

Lo ! peace is here. 



DARE YOU? 

Doubting Thomas and loving John, 
Behind the others walking on : — 

'* Tell me now, John, dare you be 
One of the minority ? 
To be lonely in your thought, 
Never visited nor sought. 
Shunned with secret shrug, to go 
Through the world esteemed its foe ; 
To be singled out and hissed, 
Pointed at as one unblessed. 
Warned against in whispers faint. 
Lest the children catch a taint ; 
To bear off your titles well, — 
Heretic and infidel ? 
If you dare, come now with me, 
Fearless, confident, and free." 

" Thomas, do vou dare to be 
Of the great majoritv ? 
To be onlv, as the rest. 
With Heaven's common comforts blessed ; 
To accept, in humble part. 
Truth that shines on every heart ; 



DARE YOU? 235 

Never to be set on high, 
Where the envious curses fly ; 
Never name or fame to find, 
Still outstripped in soul and mind j 
To be hid, unless to God, 
As one grass-blade in the sod, 
Underfoot with millions trod ? 
If you dare, come with us, be 
Lost in love's great unity." 



CHRISTMAS IN CALIFORNIA 

Can this be Christmas — sweet as May, 
With drowsy sun, and dreamy air. 

And new grass pointing out the way 
For flowers to follow, everywhere ? 

Has time grown sleepy at his post. 
And let the exiled Summer back, 

Or is it her regretful ghost, 
Or witchcraft of the almanac ? 

While wandering breaths of mignonette 

In at the open window come, 
I send my thoughts afar, and let 

Them paint your Christmas Day at home. 

Glitter of ice, and glint of frost. 
And sparkles in the crusted snow ; 

And hark ! the dancing sleigh-bells, tost 
The faster as they fainter g'-ow. 

The creaking footsteps hurry past ; 

The quick breath dims the frosty air ; 
And down the crisp road slipping fast 

Their laughing loads the cutters bear. 



CHRISTMAS IN CALIFORNIA 237 

Penciled against the cold white sky, 

Above the curling eaves of snow, 
The thin blue smoke lifts lingeringly, 

As loath to leave the mirth below. 

For at the door a merry din 

Is heard, with stamp of feathery feet, 
And chattering girls come storming in. 

To toast them at the roaring grate. 

And then from mufF and pocket peer, 
And many a warm and scented nook, 

Mysterious little bundles queer, 

That, rustling, tempt the curious look. 

Now broad upon the southern walls 

The mellowed sun's great smile appears. 

And tips the rough-ringed icicles 

With sparks, that grow to glittering tears. 

Then, as the darkening day goes by. 

The wind gets gustier without. 
And leaden streaks are on the sky. 

And whirls of snow are all about. 

Soon firelight shadows, merry crew. 
Along the darkling walls will leap 

And clap their hands, as if they knew 
A thousand things too good to keep. 



238 CHRISTMAS IN CALIFORNIA 

Sweet eyes with home's contentment filled, 
As in the smouldering coals they peer, 

Haply some wondering pictures build 
Of how I keep my Christmas here. 

Before me, on the wide, warm bay, 

A million azure ripples run ; 
Round me the sprouting palm-shoots lay 

Their shining lances to the sun. 

With glossy leaves that poise or swing. 
The callas their white cups unfold. 

And faintest chimes of odor ring 

From silver bells with tongues of gold. 

A languor of deliciousness 

Fills all the sea-enchanted clime ; 

And in the blue heavens meet, and kiss. 
The loitering clouds of summer-time. 

This fragrance of the mountain balm 
From spicy Lebanon might be ; 

Beneath such sunshine's amber calm 
Slumbered the waves of Galilee. 

O wondrous gift, in goodness given. 
Each hour anew our eyes to greet, 

An earth so fair — so close to Heaven, 
'T was trodden by the Master's feet. 



CHRISTMAS IN CALIFORNIA 239 

And we — what bring we in return ? 

Only these broken lives, and lift 
Them up to meet His pitying scorn, 

As some poor child its foolish gift : 

As some poor child on Christmas Day 
Its broken toy in love might bring j 

You could not break its heart and say 
You cared not for the worthless thing ? 

Ah, word of trust. His child ! That child 
Who brought to earth the life divine, 

Tells me the Father's pity mild 

Scorns not even such a gift as mine. 

I am His creature, and His air 

I breathe, where'er my feet may stand ; 

The angels' song rings everywhere. 
And all the earth is Holy Land. 



BUT FOR HIM 

Dumb and still was the heart of man 

By the river of Time : 

Far it stretched, and wide and free, 

This rapid river ; on it ran, 

Through many a land and many a clime, 

On and on, and no tide turned, 

Down and down to Eternity. 

Dumb and still — but the man's heart yearned 
For a voice to break the silence long ; 
And there by the side of the heart of man 
Stood the spirit of Song. 

Then the waves laughed 

Down the river of Time ; 

And the west wind and the south wind sang, 

And the world was glad, 

For now it had 

A voice to utter, in jocund chime, 

The joy it quaffed 

From the river of Time. 

But when the song grew low and sad. 
The trees drooped, 



BUT FOR HIM 241 

The flowers were dim, 

And a dark cloud down from heaven stooped ; 
The wind mourned, and tear-drops fell ; 
And the world cried, grieving, « But for him 
We had not known but all was well ! " 



NATURE AND HER CHILD 

As some poor child whose soul is windowless. 
Having not hearing, speech, nor sight, sits lone 
In her dark, silent life, till cometh one 
With a most patient heart, who tries to guess 

Some hidden way to help her helplessness, 

And, yearning for that spirit shut in stone, 

A crystal that has never seen the sun. 

Smooths now the hair, and now the hand will press, 

Or gives a kev to touch, then letters raised, 

Its svmbol; then an apple, or a ring. 

And again letters, so, all blind and dumb. 

We wait; the kindlv smiles of summer come. 

And soft winds touch our cheek, and thrushes sing ; 

The world-heart yearns, but we stand dull and dazed. 



THE FOSTER-MOTHER 

As some poor Indian wonnan 
A captive child receives, 

And warms it in her bosom, 
And o'er its weeping grieves ; 

And comforts it with kisses. 
And HtrivcH to understand 

Its eager, lonely babble. 

Fondling the little hand, — 

So Earth, our foster-mother, 
Yearns for us, with her great 

Wild heart, and croons in murmurs 
Low, inarticulate. 

She knows we are white captives, 

Her dusky race above, 
But the deep, childless bosom 

Throbs with its brooding love. 



THE LINKS OF CHANCE 

Holding apoise in air 
My twice-dipped pen, — for some tense thread of 
thought 

Had snapped, — mine ears were half aware 
Of passing wheels; eyes saw, but mind saw not, 

My sun-shot linden. Suddenly, as I stare. 
Two shifting visions grow and fade unsought : — ■ 

Noon-blaze : the broken shade 
Of ruins strown. Two Tartar lovers sit 

She gazing on the ground, face turned, afraid ; 
And he, at her. Silence is all his wit. 

She stoops, picks up a pebble of green jade 
To toss ; they watch its flight, unheeding it. 

Ages have rolled away ; 
And round the stone, by chance, if chance there be, 

Sparse soil has caught ; a seed, wind-lodged one 
day, 
Grown grass; shrubs sprung ; at last a tufted tree. 

Lo ! over its snake root yon conquering Bey 
Trips backward, fighting — and half Asia free! 



TWO VIEWS OF IT 

** O WORLD, O glorious world, good-by ! " 
Time but to think it — one wild cry 
Unuttered, a heart-wrung farewell 
To sky and wood and flashing stream, 
All gathered in a last swift gleam, 
As the crag crumbled, and he fell. 

But lo ! the thing was wonderful ! 
After the echoing crash, a lull : 
The great fir on the slope below 
Had spread its mighty mother-arm. 
And caught him, springing like a bow 
Of steel, and lowered him safe from harm, 

'T was but an instant's dark and daze : 
Then, as he felt each limb was sound. 
And slowly from the swooning haze 
The dizzy trees stood still that whirled. 
And the familiar sky and ground. 
There grew with them across his brain 
A dull regret : " So, world, dark world, 
You are come back again ! " 



TO A FACE AT A CONCERT 

When the low music makes a dusk of sound 

About us, and the viol or far-off horn 
Swells out above it like a wind forlorn, 
That wanders seeking something never found, 

What phantom in your brain, on what dim ground. 
Traces its shadowy lines ? What vision, born 
Of unfulfillment, fades in mere self-scorn, 
Or grows, from that still twilight stealing round ? 

When the lids droop and the hands lie unstrung. 
Dare one divine your dream, while the chords weave 
Their cloudy woof from key to key, and die, — 

Is it one fate that, since the world was young. 
Has followed man, and makes him half believe 
The voice of instruments a human cry ? 



THE THRUSH 

The thrush sings high on the topmost bough, — 
Low, louder, low again ; and now 
He has changed his tree, — you know not how, 
For you saw no flitting wing. 

All the notes of the forest-throng. 
Flute, reed, and string, are in his song ; 
Never a fear knows he, nor wrong, 
Nor a doubt of anything. 

Small room for care in that soft breast ; 
All weather that comes is to him the best. 
While he sees his mate close on her nest. 
And the woods are full of spring. 

He has lost his last year's love, I know, — 
He, too, — but 't is little he keeps of woe j 
For a bird forgets in a year, and so 
No wonder the thrush can sing. 



EVERY-DAY LIFE 

The marble-smith, at his morning task 
Merrily glasses the blue-\'eined stone, 

With stout hands circling smooth. You ask, 
" What will it be, when it is done? " 

" A shaft for a young girl's grave." Both hands 
Go back with a will to their sinewy play ; 
And he sings like a bird, as he swaying stands, 
A rollicking stave of Love and May. 



AT LAST 

From all the long, bright daytime's restlessness, 
Through starlight's broken promise of redress. 
From eyes that care not, hands that cannot bless, 
Down all the wintry, withered, endless train 
Of years that flowered in hope to fruit in pain, 
I claim no happiness. 

Sweet soul, that art so rich in blessed store. 
See all my hungry heart, my need is sore j 
Oh, if thou boldest it, withhold no more ! 

Let not that wandering hope, that blind with tears, 
Comes down to me through all the desert years, 
Drop dead, even at the door. ' 

What wistful thought thou darest not confess 

Shadows thy dawn-lit eyes with tenderness ? 

What timid stir as of a mute caress 

Dares only thrill thy trembling finger-tips — 
What word waits, dumb and quivering, at thy lips ? 

O Love, my happiness ! 



FOREST HOME 

Forest-Mother, I have stayed 
Too long away from thee ; 

Let me come home tor these few hours 
That from the world arc free. 

Oh ! mother, thev have saddened me 

With all their foolish din ; 
Lowly I knock at thy green gate ; 

Dear mother, let me in. 

Down where the tumbled towers of rock 
Their perilous stairs have made, 

Holding the tough young hemlock boughs 
For slender balustrade, 

1 find my pleasant home, fur ort' 

From all men say and do — 
Far as the world from which we flash 
When some swift dream breaks through. 

Again the grave old hemlock trees 
Stretch down their feathery palms. 

And murmur up against the blue 
Their solemn breath of psalms } 



FOREST HOME 251 

And here my little brothers are, 

The sparrow and the bee, 
The wren that almost used to dare 

To perch upon my knee ; 

The dust of sunshine under foot. 

The darkness over head, 
The sliding gleam that swings along 

The unseen spider's thread ; 

The low arched path beneath the boughs. 

And half-way down it laid 
A falling fringe of sun-lit leaves 

Against the roof of shade ; 

The sunshine clasping round both sides 

A broken cedar old, 
Rimming its shaft so dark and wet 

In green and massy gold. 

In hollows where the evening glooms 

Rest drowsily all day. 
In the blue shadows of the pines, 

Sprinkled with golden spray. 

Dimpled red cheeks of berries hid 

A wary eye discerns, 
And timid little pale-faced flowers 

Peep through the latticed ferns. 



25» FOREST HOME 

O Mother, they are proud and blind 
Who from all these would stay ; 

Yet do not scorn them unforgiven, 
But woo them day by day. 

Let all sweet winds from all fair dells, 
And whispering breath of pine, 

Pursue and lure the wanderer 
Back to thy rest divine. 

If I must build in Babel still 
Till that last summons come, 

Oh ! call me when the hour is near. 
And let me die at home. 

'T were sweet, I know, to stay ; but so 
'T were sweetest to depart. 

Thy cool, still hand upon my face, 
Thy silence in my heart. 



THE SINGER'S CONFESSION 

Once he cried to all the hills and waters 
And the tossing grain and tufted grasses : 
" Take my message — tell it to my brothers ! 
Stricken mute I cannot speak my message. 
When the evening wind comes back from ocean, 
Singing surf-songs, to Earth's fragrant bosom, 
And the beautiful young human creatures 
Gather at the mother feet of Nature, 
Gazing with their pure and wistful faces, 
Tell the old heroic human story. 
When they weary of the wheels of science. 
Grinding, jangling their harsh dissonances, — 
Stones and bones and alkalis and atoms, — 
Sing to them of human hope and passion ; 
And the soul divine, whose incarnation. 
Born of love — alas! my message stumbles. 
Faints on faltering lips : Oh, speak it for me ! " 

Then a hush fell ; and around about him 
Suddenly he felt the mighty shadow 
Of the hills, like grave and silent pity; 
And, as one who sees without regarding. 
The wide wind went over him and left him. 
And the brook, repeating low, " His message ! " 
Babbled, as it fled, a quiet laughter. 



254 THE SINGER'S CONFESSION 

What was he, that he had touched their message — 
Theirs, who had been chanting it forever : 
With whose organ-tones the human spirit 
Had etcrnallv boon overflowing ' 
Then, with shame that stung in cheek and forehead, 
Slow he crept awav. 

And now he listens. 
Mute and still, to hear them tell their message — 
All the holy hills and sacred waters ; 
\Vhcn the sea-wind swings its evening censer, 
Till the misty incense hides the altar 
And the long-robed shadows, lowly kneeling. 



A MYTH OF FANTASY AND FIRST LOVE 

Hji> in the silence of a forest deep 

JJwelt a fair soul in flesh that was as fair. 

<')ver her nimble hands her floating hair 

Made waving shadows, while her eyes did keep 

The winding track of weaving intricate. 

Kariy at morn and at the evening late, 

A robe of shimmering silk she wove with care. 

Hour after hour, though might she smile or weep, 

Still ran the golden or the glooming thread. 

Waking she wove that which she dreamed asleep. 

Till many a noon had bloomed above her tender head. 

Now when the time was full, the robe was done. 
Jyight she would hold it in her loving hand. 
And with wide eyes of wonder she would stand 
f' fjr half the day, and turn it to the sun. 
To see its gold lights shift and melt away 
And grow again, and flash in myriad play. 
Or white it glimmered in each glossy strand, 
]<'(;r half the night she held it to the moon ; 
Or, sitting with it sleeked across her knee, 
She would bend down above it, and would croon 
The strangest bits of broken songs that e'er could 
be. 



256 FANTASY AND FIRST LOVE 

Then came the dawn when (so her doom had said) 
Out through the shadowy forest she must go, 
And follow whatsoever chance might show, 
Or whither any sound her footsteps led ; 
Taking for wayward guides whatever stirred — 
The rustling squirrel, or the startled bird, 
Their pathless ways pursuing, fast or slow, 
Until the forest's border she should tread. 
There whosoever met her, she must fling 
That woven wonder blindly on his head, 
And see in him her only lord and king. 

Dim was the morn, and dew-wet was the way : 

Aloft the ancient cedars lifted high 

Their jagged crosses on the dawn-streaked sky : 

Below, the gossamers were glimmering gray 

Along her path, and many a silver thread 

Caught glancing lights, in floating curves o'erhead ; 

And little dew-showers pattered far and nigh, 

Where wakened thrushes stirred the sprinkled spray 

For hours she wandered where her footsteps led, 

Till a long lance of open sunlight lay 

As red as gold upon her lifted, eager head. 

Ah, woe for her that mortal doom must be ! 

Just then the prince came spurring, fair and young. 

With heart as merry as the song he sung: 

But as she started forward, at her knee 

A cringing beggar from the weeds close by 



FANTASY AND FIRST LOVE 257 

Holds up his cap for alms, with whining cry. 
Swift over him the lifted robe was flung : 
Henceforth, his slave, forever she must see 
All princely beauty in that brutal face — 
Heaven send that by some deeper witchery 
His swinish soul through her may gain some touch of 
grace. 



THE DEPARTURE OF THE PILOT 

Written on the Departure of President Daniel C. 
gilman from california 

Slender spars and snowy wings, 
Ye unireriity i« Afrowy hull that clcavcs the foam, — 

likened by ye c I L j L- Ji 

poet to ».hip. bee! the good ship grandly swings 
Forth to seek her ocean home. 



Thro* the narrow harbor-gate, 
sheuinperiiof P^st the Toclcs that guard the bay, 

legniiturei Towards where friendlier billows wait. 
Well she holds her stately way. 



Angry now the breakers are ; 

Gleam their white teeth in the sun. 
Where along the shallow bar, 

Fierce and high their ridges run. 

But the pilot-captain, lo I 

How serene in strength is he ! 

Blithe as winds that dawnward blow, 
Fresh and fearless as the sea. 



and of ye public. 



THE DEPARTURE OF THE PILOT 259 

Now the shifting breezes fail, 
Baffling gusts arise and die, 

01 1 -1 »teereth 

Shakes and shudders every sail, 
Hark ! the rocks are roaring nigh. 

But the pilot keeps her keel 

Where the current runneth fair, 

her 

Deftly turns the massive wheel 

Light as though 't were hung in air. 



Hark ! the bar on either side ! 

Hiss of foam, and crash of crest. 
Trampling feet, and shouts — they glide 

Safely out on ocean's breast. 



into open water. 



Then the Pilot gives his hand 

To his brother, close beside : ^^ addxesseth 

" Now 't is thine to take command, ^* ^' ^' 

I must back at turn of tide." 

Then the brother-captains true 

Grasp each other by the hand. 
Bidding cheerily adieu 

But a moment as they stand. 



Something in the elder's eye 
Glimmers — is it but the 
imething — could it be a si 
Or a breeze that died away ? 



Glimmers — is it but the spray ? And j. te c. 

CI 1 • 1 1 • I • 1 speaketh 

Somethmg — could it be a sigh, to 



D. C. C. 



260 THE DEPARTURE OF THE PILOT 

And quoth he : " O brother brave, 
Wisely thou hast steered and well, 

Now all fair are wind and wave, — 
Come and tarry with us still." 

" Wave and wind at last are fair, 
in^i,j,h Rosy-bright the new-born day, 

'"'"• Hope and faith are in the air, — 

Come and sail with us for aye ! " 

But the pilot's shallop-prow 
Buttheorerund Chafes against the vessel's side: 

locomocive 1 ■ 1 

•noneth " Nay, true neart, thy wisdom now 

Shall the good ship's fortunes guide." 



" On the morrow they shall launch 
•nd Yonder from the Eastern shore, 

Johns Hopkinf -.r 1 11 

mutt be begun. Yet another vessel, staunch, 

Sound as e'er was built before. 



Hopes and prayers upon her wait : 
Her deep bosom, grand and free. 

Bears a wealth of mystic freight : 
I must guide her to the sea. 



But ilnce both 

are royiging 

after truth 

and progreM 



" But upon our voyage far 

We shall meet in other days. 
Since the same pure polar star 
Shines to beacon both our ways. 



THE DEPARTURE OF THE PILOT 261 

" Far away where favoring gales 

Blow from many a spicy beach, the ehip» »baii 
We shall see our shining sails .ight & 

Nodding friendly, each to each. 

" Many a morning that shall dawn 

With its radiant prophecy, be of ye 

Still shall greet us sailing on — "■"' ^"'• 

Comrades on the glorious sea." 



AN ANSWER 

TO THE YALE CLASS OF 1861, READ JUNE 28, 1876 

Dear friends, ask not from me a song : 
The singing days to spring belong, 
And in our hearts, as in this clime, 
Spring has long turned to summer-time. 
The morning dreams have fled afar. 
When every dew-drop held a star : 
The broad, full noon is here — till even 
The stars have drawn away to heaven. 

With you 't is June ; and rosebuds blush. 
And golden sunsets glow and flush : 
While every breeze, with Psyche wings, 
Wafts promise of immortal things ; 
And every shower of perfumed rain 
Brightens to rainbow hope again. 
'T is meet that in that fragrant air 
Your songs defy old Time and care, 
While overhead the elms shall swing. 
And hand to hand old friendships cling: 
Ah, sweet and strong your voices ring ! 



AN ANSWER 263 

But here, upon the planet's verge, 

The grassy velvet turns to serge : 

No shower has wet the hillocks sere 

Since April shed her parting tear. 

The poppies on the hill are dead, 

And the wild oat is harvested : 

The canyon's flowers are brown with seed. 

And only blooms some wayside weed. 

No leafy elms their shadows throw. 

No moist and odorous breezes blow ; 

But all the bare, brown hills along 

The ocean wind sweeps sad and strong. 

Then ask not, friends, from me a song ! 

Yet think not that this sombre strain 
Would, dear old friends, of fate complain. 
Though spring has gone, and singing days. 
The sunshine, and the starshine, stays. 
If no more bloom the hillsides yield. 
The tented sheaves are in the field : 
The tawny slopes are sending down 
Their harvest loads to farm and town. 
If early spring-time fled with tears, 
Yet earlier harvest-time appears. 
And if far off, as in a dream, 
I see your merry faces beam, 
And if far off, as through the deep, 
I hear your songs their cadence keep, 
I know 't were childishness to weep. 



264 AN ANSWER 

For all the time is grand indeed! 

And whether June bring flower or seed — 

And whether softest breezes blow, 

Or ocean's organ-music flow, 

Not backward only turn our eves, 

But forward, where along the skies 

The brighter dawn-lights break and rise. 

For all the love these years have stored 

Wells up to manlier deed and word. 

The nerveless grasp of girlish youth 

Grips now the banner staff of truth ; 

The careless song, half sung, rings out 

Changed to a mighty battle-shout ; 

And we that kept our holiday 

With wine and fragrant mists and play, 

Shall yet, perchance, even such as we, 

Fulfill our half-heard prophecy. 

The vision we but half divined, 

Wrought out with steadier heart and mind, 

Shall bless the world of humankind. 



IN MEMORY OF A MUSICIAN 
Died San Francisco, October, 1S78 

Dead ! And the echoes dumb, 
That thrilled our very inmost soul to hear: 
And now through all the rich autumnal air, 

His city's hum 
Murmurs in fitful throbs, like dying beat 

Of funeral drum ! 

Hark ! 't is the voice of song — 
No dirge, no requiem chant of hopeless woe, 
With tramp of dull, unwilling footsteps slow : 

Nay, that would wrong 
The cheery life that ever was so sweet, 

Tender and strong : 

But waves along the shore. 
That plash and sing like little children's mirth, 
Whose faces he loved best of all the earth. 

And winds that o'er 
This lonely world still blow, never to greet 

His music more — 

Those waves and winds I hear. 
And whispering trees, and note of happy bird. 



266 IN MEMORY OF A MUSICIAN 

And Nature's every mellow tone is heard, 

Singing full clear 
The old immortal harmonies his feet 

Followed so near. 

Still, Nature, still repeat 
Thy purest symphonies for his pure sake, 
Whose heart love's grandest victory could take 

From love's defeat ; 
Whose life was bruised, like some sweet herb, to 
make 

All others sweet. 



A DREAM WITHIN A DREAM 

Yale Club, San Francisco, December 12, 1878 

The green was all with shadows blent ; 

The night-wind, surf-like, here and there 
Broke softly on the elms and sent 

Its spray of whispers down the air. 

The empty streets, long silent, hid 

Beneath their leafy arches lay : 
Only a sleepy cricket chid. 

Or distant footfall died away. 

Our college feast had broken up ; 

No banquet rich, no spices rare. 
No gleam of wine from jeweled cup. 

But youth, immortal youth was there. 

'T was boyish talk, — the race crew's fate. 
The jovial tutor's joke and grin. 

And who would conquer in debate. 
And who would wear the mystic pin. 

No clutching Past our spirits held : 

Our eyes looked forward; it was spring: 

The fresh sap stirred, the new buds swelled - 
No wonder we could feast and sing. 



268 A DREAM WITHIN A DREAM 

The small puns crackled, and ere long 

The deeper thoughts would come and go j 

And evermore some burst of song 
Startled the slumbering rooms below. 

And when we parted — not too soon — 
With shouted calls from mate to mate, 

We laughed to see the tipsy moon 
Rise staring, crooked-faced, so late. 

We strolled, my friend and I, to where 
The street becomes a wooded lane : 

Talking of many a fancy fair. 

And all the blossoms of the brain. 

Our life should break, we said, its bars 
And we would sail the seas, and there 

Beneath that western crown of stars 
The golden future we would share. 

The sleepy elms were breathing low, 
Phantoms their hollow arches filled; 

The withered moon lay faint and low ; 
Fantastic shadows stirred and stilled. 

But on I wandered, now alone, 

And where the wooded lane grew steep 

Sat drowsing : the weird dark had grown 
A part of me ; I seemed to sleep. 



A DREAM WITHIN A DREAM 269 

And all the present years were dead — 
Their stormy joys, their passions sweet j 

And youth and winged hope were fled 
Adown the dark with silent feet. 

The night wind seemed more chill to be ; 

The hills rose strangely bare and round : 
A great bay narrowed to the sea 

Beyond the city's glimmering mound. 

My brain was numb, my heart was lead; 

Dear faces faded far and cold j 
Some were forgotten, some were dead, 

And all were scattered, chill, and old. 

That feast night 'mid the floating trees 

Seemed ages in the silent past ; 
Those friendships, darling memories, — 

Too pure, too warm, too sweet to last. 

Among the hillslopes, wan and sad. 
The marbles of a graveyard gleamed. 

And ghosts were near, and I was glad 
Even in my dream to think I dreamed, 

But still I thought I dreamed : the west 
Grew gray, and troops of fog came in, 

Stalking across the city's crest 

Like ghastly shapes of joy and sin. 



270 A DREAM WITHIN A DREAM 

The white dawn seemed to grow more cold ; 

Its bitter breath was freezing me : 
I shivered, and awoke — behold ! 

The bare, round hills, the muffled sea. 

The mountain peak beyond the bay, 
Stern, silent, as the vanquished are ; 

Round him the folded shadows lav. 
And on his forehead was a scar. 

The vision I had found so drear 

Waked with me, and is with me still ; 

The future of my dream was here. 
And I had slept on Berkeley hill. 

I had arisen before unclosed 

The sleeping orient's earliest gleam, 

And climbed, and sat, or mused and dozed. 
And dreamed this dream within a dream. 

But now the full dawn comes : the sun 
Breaks through the canyon with his gold. 

The jocund lark-songs have begun, 

The mountain's brow is clear and bold. 

The good salt sea wind blows; the mist 

Unveils the city shining fair; 
Its floating shreds the sun has kissed 

To pearls that fleck the upper air. 



A DREAM WITHIN A DREAM 271 

So drift away the moods of night, 
So shines the manlier purpose free; 

The breezy Present wakes in light, 
And plans the richer world to be. 



A RESTING-PLACE 

A SEA of shade j with hollow heights above, 
Where floats the redwood's airy roof away, 

Whose feathery lace the drowsy breezes move. 
And softly through the azure windows play: 
No nearer stir than yon white cloud astray, 

No closer sound than sob of distant dove. 

I only live as the deep forest's swoon 

Dreams me amid its dream ; for all things fade 

Nor pulse of mine disturbs the unconscious noon. 
Even love and hope are still — albeit they made 
My heart beat yesterday — in slumber laid, 

Like yon dim ghost that last night was the moon. 

Only the bending grass, grown gray and sere. 
Nods now and then, where at my feet it swings, 

Pleased that another like itself is here. 

Unseen among the mighty forest things — 
Another fruitless life, that fading clings 

To earth and autumn days in doubt and fear. 

Dream on, O wood ! O wind, stay in thy west. 
Nor wake the shadowy spirit of the fern, 



A RESTING-PLACE 273 

Asleep along the fallen pine-tree's breast ! 

That, till the sun go down, and night-stars burn. 
And the chill dawn-breath from the sea return. 

Tired earth may taste heaven's honey-dew of rest. 



THE MYSTERY 

I NEVER know why 't is I love thee so : 
I do not think 't is that thine eyes for me 
Grow bright as sudden sunshine on the sea ; 
Nor for thy rose-leaf lips, or breast of snow, 
Or voice like quiet waters where they flow. 

So why I love thee well I cannot tell : 
Only it is that when thou speak'st to me 
'T is thy voice speaks, and when thy face I see 
It is thy face I see ; and it befell 
Thou wert, and I was, and I love thee well. 



THE FOOL'S PRAYER 

The royal feast was done ; the King 
Sought some new sport to banish care, 

And to his jester cried : " Sir Fool, 

Kneel now, and make for us a prayer ! ** 

The jester doffed his cap and bells, 
And stood the mocking court before ; 

They could not see the bitter smile 
Behind the painted grin he wore. 

He bowed his head, and bent his knee 
Upon the monarch's silken stool ; 

His pleading voice arose : " O Lord, 
Be merciful to me, a fool ! 

" No pity, Lord, could change the heart 

From red with wrong to white as wool j 
The rod must heal the sin : but, Lord, 
Be merciful to me, a fool ! 

" 'T is not by guilt the onward sweep 

Of truth and right, O Lord, we stay; 
'T is by our follies that so long 

We hold the earth from heaven away. 



276 THE FOOL'S PRAYER 

" These clumsy feet, still in the mire, 
Go crushing blossoms without end ; 
These hard, well-meaning hands we thrust 
Among the heart-strings of a friend. 

*■*■ The ill-timed truth we might have kept — 

Who knows how sharp it pierced and stung ? 
The word we had not sense to say — 
Who knows how grandly it had rung ? 

" Our faults no tenderness should ask. 

The chastening stripes must cleanse them all ; 
But for our blunders — oh, in shame 
Before the eyes of heaven we fall. 

" Earth bears no balsam for mistakes ; 

Men crown the knave, and scourge the tool 
That did his will ; but Thou, O Lord, 
Be merciful to me, a fool ! " 

The room was hushed ; in silence rose 
The King, and sought his gardens cool, 

And walked apart, and murmured low, 
" Be merciful to me, a fool I " 



OPPORTUNITY 

This I beheld, or dreamed it in a dream : — 

There spread a cloud of dust along a plain j 

And underneath the cloud, or in it, raged 

A furious battle, and men yelled, and swords 

Shocked upon swords and shields. A prince's banner 

Wavered, then staggered backward, hemmed by foes. 

A craven hung along the battle's edge. 

And thought, " Had I a sword of keener steel — 

That blue blade that the king's son bears, — but this 

Blunt thing — ! " he snapt and flung it from his hand. 

And lowering crept away and left the field. 

Then came the king's son, wounded, sore bestead, 

And weaponless, and saw the broken sword. 

Hilt-buried in the dry and trodden sand. 

And ran and snatched it, and with battle-shout 

Lifted afresh he hewed his enemy down. 

And saved a great cause that heroic day. 



AN ASPIRATION 
Yalf Clvb, San Frascisco, December ii, iS'9 

Let us return once more, we said. 
And greet the saintlv mother Yale ; 

That grav and venerable head, 

That wrinkled brow, time-worn and pale. 

So from afar we fared, and found 

Her children thronging round her feet : 

The summer all her elms had crowned. 
The dappled grass was cool and sweet. 

But lo ! no ancient dame was there. 

With tottering step and waning powers : 

Our maiden mother, fresh and fair, 

Stood queenlike 'mid her trees and towers. 

Men mav grow old : Time's tremulous hands 
Still hasten the spent glass ; but she — 
*' Mewing her mighty youth " she stands. 
And wears her laurels royally. 

From olden fountain-wells that flow 
Down every sacred height of truth, 

As pure as hre, as cold as snow. 

Her lips have quafled immortal youth. 



AN ASPIRATION 279 

Her feet in fields of amaranth tread, 

Lilies of every golden clime 
Are in her hand, and round her head 



The aureole of the coming time. 



Ah, maiden-mother, might there rise 
C^n these far shores a power like thine, 

With Learning's sceptre, mild and wise, 
And all the sister Arts benign ! 

It matters little that it bear 

The name that Cloyne's great bishop bore, 
If only it might bring the fair 

Fulfillment of his thought of yore ; 

If somewhere, on the hill or plain. 
By forest's calm, or quickening sea, 

Or where the town's electric brain 
With silent lightnings flashes free, — 

If one like Yale among us stood, 

To nourish at her ample breast 
And feed with her ambrosial food 

The infant vigor of the West. 

The smitten rocks pour forth in vain 

Their iMidas-streams : when shall be wrought 

From out our store some classic fane, 
Some cloistered home of finer thought ? 



28o AN ASPIRATION 

Ofttimes a troubled mood will bring 

The vision of a land forlorn, 
Where gold is prophet, priest, and king, 

And wisdom is a name of scorn j 

Whose treasures build the gambler's halls. 
Whose tinsel follies flaunt the skies, 

Whose horses feed in marble stalls. 

While Learning begs for crumbs, and dies. 

The waves that throb from Asia's breast 
Prophetic murmur on our shore : 

Barbarian throngs from East, from West — 
Who knows what fortunes are in store ? 

Nay, thou foreboding mood, be still ! 

And let a farther-sighted pen 
Point out the better fate that Will 

And Hope make possible to men. 

What man has done, still man can do : 
Of slumbering force there is no dearth ; 

And beckoning hands and hearts may woo 
The banished Muses back to earth. 

We, too, those fountain-wells have known, 
And quaffed the life no years destroy j 

And under every snowiest crown 

Still dreams and yearns the immortal Boy. 



AN ASPIRATION 281 

Nor shall that yearning be in vain : 
With boyish hope but manlier will 

We dream our rosy dreams again, 
And build our airy castles still. 

But not of passion's luring wraith, 
Nor selfish fancy's empty foam ; 

Of steadfast brother-love, in faith, 
We build the better time to come. 



THE NORTH WIND 

All night, beneath the flashing hosts of stars, 
The North poured forth the passion of its soul 
In mighty longings for the tawny South, 
Sleeping afar among her orange-blooms. 
All night, through the deep canon's organ-pipes, 
Swept down the grand orchestral harmonies 
Tumultuous, till the hills' rock buttresses 
Trembled in unison. 

The sun has risen, 
But still the storming sea of air beats on, 
And o'er the broad green slopes a flood of light 
Comes streaming through the heavens like a wind. 
Till every leaf and twig becomes a lyre 
And thrills with vibrant splendor. 

Down the bay 
The furrowed blue, save that 't is starred with foam. 
Is bare and empty as the sky of clouds ; 
For all the little sails, that yesterday 
Flocked past the islands, now have furled their wings. 
And huddled frightened at the wharves — just as, 
A moment since, a flock of twittering birds 
Whirled through the almond-trees like scattered leaves. 
And hid beyond the hedge. 



THE NORTH WIND 283 

How the old oaks 
Stand stiffly to it, and wrestle with the storm ! 
While the tall eucalyptus' plumy tops 
Tumble and toss and stream with quivering light. 
Hark ! when it lulls a moment at the ear, 
The fir-trees sing their sea-song : — now again 
The roar is all about us like a flood ; 
And like a flood the fierce light shines, and burns 
Away all distance, till the far blue ridge, 
That rims the ocean, rises close at hand. 
And high, Prometheus-like, great Tamalpais 
Lifts proudly his grand front, and bears his scar. 
Heaven's scath of wrath, defiant like a god. 

I thank thee, glorious wind ! Thou bringest me 
Something that breathes of mountain crags and pines. 
Yea, more — from the unsullied, farthest North, 
Where crashing icebergs jar like thunder shocks. 
And midnight splendors wave and fade and flame. 
Thou bring'st a keen, fierce joy. So wilt thou help 
The soul to rise in strength, as some great wave 
Leaps forth, and shouts, and lifts the ocean-foam, 
And rides exultant round the shining world. 



THE TREE OF MY LIFE 

When I was vet but a child, the gardener ga\e me a 

tree, 
A little slim elm, to be set wherever seemed good to 

me. 
What a wonderful thing it seemed ' with its lace-edge 

leaves uncurled. 
And its span-long stem, that should grow to the grand- 
est tree in the world ! 
So I searched all the garden round, and out over field 

and hill. 
But not a spot could I find that suited mv \>-avward 

will. 
I would have it bowered in the grove, in a close and 

quiet vale ; 
I would rear it alot't on the height, to wrestle with the 

gale. 

Then I said, " I will cover its ax">ts with a little earth 
bv the door, 

And there it shall live and wait, while I search for a 
place once more." 

But still I could never find it, the place for mv won- 
drous tree, 

And it waited and grew bv the door, while vears 
passed over me ; 



THE TREE OF MY LIFE 285 

Till suddenly, one fine day, I saw it was grown too 

tall. 
And its roots gone down too deep, to be ever moved 

at all. 

So here it is growing still, by the lowly cottage door ; 

Never so grand and tall as I dreamed it would be of 
yore. 

But it shelters a tired old man in its sunshine-dappled 
shade. 

The children's pattering feet round its knotty knees 
have played. 

Dear singing birds in a storm sometimes take refuge 
there. 

And the stars through its silent boughs shine glori- 
ously fair. 



THE DESERTER 

Blindest and most frantic prayer, 
Clutching at a senseless boon, 

His that begs, in mad despair, 

Death to come ; — he comes so soon ! 

Like a reveler that strains 

Lip and throat to drink it up — 

The last rubv that remains. 
One red droplet in the cup. 

Like a child that, sullen, mute. 

Sulking spurns, with chin on breast, 

Of the Tree of Life a fruit, 

His gift of whom he is the guest. 

Outcast on the thither shore. 
Open scorn to him shall give 

Souls that heavier burdens bore : 

" See the wretch that dared not live ! '* 



A CALIFORNIAN'S DREAMS 

A THUNDER-STORM of the oldeii days ! 

The red sun sinks in a sleepy haze ; 

The sultry twilight, close and still, 

Muffles the cricket's drowsy trill. 

Then a round-topped cloud rolls up the west^ 

Black to its smouldering, ashy crest, 

And the chariot of the storm you hear. 

With its jarring axle rumbling near ; 

Till the blue is hid, and here and there 

The sudden, blinding lightnings glare. 

Scattering now the big drops fall, 

Till the rushing rain in a silver wall 

Blurs the line of the bending elms. 

Then blots them out and the landscape whclmj 

A flash — a clap, and a rumbling peal : 

The broken clouds the blue reveal ; 

The last bright drops fall far away. 

And the wind, that had slept for heat all day. 

With a long-drawn sigh awakes again 

And drinks the cool of the blessed rain. 

November! night, and a sleety storm : 

Close are the ruddy curtains, warm 

And rich in the glow of the roaring grate, 



2S8 A CALIFORNIAN'S DREAMS 

It may howl outside like a baffled fate, 
And rage on the roof, and lash the pane 
With its fierce and impotent wrath in vain. 
Sitting within at our roval ease 
We sing to the chime of the ivorv kevs, 
And feast our hearts from script and score 
With the wealth of the mellow hearts of vore 

A winter's night on a world of snow ! 
Not a sound above, not a stir below • 
The moon hangs white in the icy air. 
And the shadows are motionless even'where. 
Is this the planet that we know — 
This silent floor of the ghostlv snow ? 
Or is this the moon, so still and dead, 
And vonder orb far overhead. 
With its silver map of plain and sea. 
Is that the earth where we used to be ? 
Shall we float away in the frosty blue 
To that living, summer world we knew. 
With its full, hot heart-beats as of old, 
Or be frozen phantoms of the cold ? 

A river of ice, all blue and glare. 
Under a star-shine dim and rare. 
The sheenv sheet in the sparkling light 
Is ribbed with slender wisps of white — 
Crinkles of snow, that the flving steel 
Lishtlv crunches with rinsino; heel. 



A CALIFORNIAN'S DREAMS 289 

Swinging swift as the swallows skim, 
You round the shadowy river's rim : 
Falling somewhere out of the sky 
Hollow and weird is the owlet's cry; 
The gloaming woods seem phantom hosts, 
And the bushes cower in the snow like ghosts. 
Till the tinkling feet that with you glide 
Skate closer and closer to your side, 
And something steals from a furry mufF, 
And you clasp it and cannot wonder enough 
That a little palm so soft and fair 
Could keep so warm in the frosty air. 

'T is thus we dream in our tranquil clime. 
Rooted still in the olden time ; 
Longing for all those glooms and gleams 
Of passionate Nature's mad extremes. 
Or was it only our hearts, that swelled 
With the youth and life and love they held ? 



THE VENUS OF MILO, AND 
OTHER POEMS 

THE VENUS OF MILO 

There fell a vision to Praxiteles : 
Watching thro' drowsy lids the loitering seas 
That lay caressing with white arms of foam 
The sleeping marge of his Ionian home. 
He saw great Aphrodite standing near, 
Knew her, at last, the Beautiful he had sought 
With lifelong passion, and in love and fear 
Into unsullied stone the vision wrought. 

Far other was the form that Cnidos gave 
To senile Rome, no longer free or brave, — 
The Medicean, naked like a slave. 
The Cnidians built her shrine 
Of creamy ivory fine ; 
Most costly was the floor 
Of scented cedar, and from door 
Was looped to carven door 
Rich stuff of Tyrian purple, in whose shade 
Her glistening shoulders and round limbs outshone. 



THE VENUS OF MILO 291 

Milk-white as lilies in a summer moon. 
Here honey-hearted Greece to worship came, 
And on her altar leaped a turbid flame. 
The quickened blood ran dancing to its doom, 
And lip sought trembling lip in that rich gloom. 

But the island people of Cos, by the salt main 
From Persia's touch kept clean. 
Chose for their purer shrine amid the seas 
That grander vision of Praxiteles. 
Long ages after, sunken in the ground 
Of sea-girt Melos, wondering shepherds found 
The marred and dinted copy which men name 
Venus of Milo, saved to endless fame. 

Before the broken marble, on a day. 
There came a worshiper : a slanted ray 
Struck in across the dimness of her shrine 
And touched her face as to a smile divine ; 
For it was like the worship of a Greek 
At her old altar. Thus I heard him speak : — 

Men call thee Love : is there no holier name 
Than hers, the foam-born, laughter-loving dame ? 
Nay, for there is than love no holier name : 
All words that pass the lips of mortal men 
With inner and with outer meaning shine j 
An outer gleam that meets the common ken, 
An inner light that but the few divine. 



292 THE VENUS OF MILO 

Thou art the love celestial, seeking still 
The soul beneath the form ; the serene will ; 
The wisdom, of whose deeps the sages dream ; 
The unseen beauty that doth faintly gleam 
In stars, and flowers, and waters where they roll ; 
The unheard music whose faint echoes even 
Make whosoever hears a homesick soul 
Thereafter, till he follow it to heaven. 

Larger than mortal woman I see thee stand, 
With beautiful head bent forward steadily. 
As if those earnest eyes could see 
Some glorious thing far off, to which thy hand 
Invisibly stretched onward seems to be. 
From thy white forehead's breadth of calm, the 

hair 
Sweeps lightly, as a cloud in windless air. 
Placid thy brows, as that still line at dawn 
Where the dim hills along the sky are drawn, 
When the last stars are drowned in deeps afar. 
Thy quiet mouth — I know not if it smile, 
Or if in some wise pity thou wilt weep, — 
Little as one may tell, some summer morn. 
Whether the dreamy brightness is most glad, 
Or wonderfully sad, — 
So bright, so still thy lips serenely sleep ; 
So fixedly thine earnest eyes the while. 
As clear and steady as the morning star. 
Their gaze upon that coming glory keep. 



THE VENUS OF MILO 293 

Thy garment's fallen folds 
Leave beautiful the fair, round breast 
In sacred loveliness ; the bosom deep 
Where happy babe might sleep ; 
The ample waist no narrowing girdle holds, 
Where daughters slim might come to cling and rest. 
Like tendriled vines against the plane-tree pressed. 
Around thy firm, large limbs and steady feet 
The robes slope downward, as the folded hills 
Slope round the mountain's knees, when shadow fills 
The hollow canons, and the wind is sweet 
From russet oat-fields and the ripening wheat. 

From our low world no gods have taken wing; 
Even now upon our hills the twain are wandering : 
The Medicean's sly and servile grace, 
And the immortal beauty of thy face. 
One is the spirit of all short-lived love 
And outward, earthly loveliness : 
The tremulous rosy morn is her mouth's smile, 
The sky her laughing azure eyes above ; 
And, waiting for caress. 
Lie bare the soft hill-slopes, the while 
Her thrilling voice is heard 

In song of wind and wave, and every flitting bird. 
Not plainly, never quite herself she shows ; 
Just a swift glance of her illumined smile 
Along the landscape goes ; 
Just a soft hint of singing, to beguile 



294 THE VFNIS OF MTI.O 

A man tVom all his toil ; 

Some vanished gleam of beckoning arm, to spoil 

A morning's task with longing wild and vain. 

Then if across the parching plain 

He seek her, she with passion burns 

His heart to fever, and he hears 

The west wind's mocking laughter when he turns. 

Shivering in mist of ocean's sullen tears. 

It is the Medicean : well I know 

The arts her ancient subtlety will show ; 

The stubble-tields she turns to ruddy gold j 

The empty distance she will fold 

In purple gauze; the warm glow she has kissed 

Along the chilling mist : 

Cheating and cheated love that grow* to hate 

And ever deeper loathing, soon or late. 

Thou, too, O fairer spirit, walkest here 
1'pv.^n the lifted hills ; 

Wherever that still thought within the breast 
The inner beauty of the world hath moved ; 
In starlight that the dome of evening fills j 
On endless >\-ateri: rv>unding to the west : 
For them who thrv>' that beautv's veil ha\-e loved 
The soul of all things beautiful the best. 
For King bnxid a«~ake, long ere the dawn. 
Staring against the dark, the blank of space 
Opens immeasurablv, and thy face 
Wavers and glimmers there and is withdrawn. 



THE VENUS OF MILO 295 

And manv days, when all one's work is vain, 

And lite goes stretching on, a waste gray plain, 

With e\ en the short mirage of morning gone, 

No cool breath anywhere, no shadow nigh 

Where a weary man might lay him down and die, 

Lo ! thou art there before me suddenly, 

\\ ith shade as if a summer cloud did pass. 

And sprav of fountains whispering to the grass. 

Oh, save me from the haste and noise and heat 

That spoil life's music sweet : 

And from that lesser Aphrodite there — 

Even now she stands 

Close as I turn, and, O my soul, how fair ! 

Nav, I will heed not thv white beckoning hands, 

Nor thv soft lips like the curled inner leaf 

In a rosebud's breast, kissed languid by the sun. 

Nor eyes like liquid gleams where waters run. 

Yea, thou art beautiful as morn ; 

And even as I draw nigh 

To scoff, I own the loveliness I scorn. 

Farewell, for thou hast lost me : keep thv train 

Of wor<:hipers ; me thou dost lure in vain : 

The inner passion, pure as very fire. 

Burns to light ash the earthlier desire. 

O greater Aphrodite, unto thee 
Let me not sav farewell. W'hat would Earth be 
Without thv presence ? Surely unto me 
A lifelong weariness, a dull, bad dream. 



296 THE VENUS OF MILO 

Abide with me, and let thy calm brows beam 

Fresh hope upon me every amber dawn, 

New peace when evening's violet veil is drawn. 

Then, tho' I see along the glooming plain 

The Medicean's waving hand again. 

And white feet glimmering in the harvest-field, 

I shall not turn, nor yield ; 

But as heaven deepens, and the Cross and Lvre 

Lift up their stars beneath the Northern Crown, 

Unto the yearning of the world's desire 

I shall be 'ware of answer coming down ; 

And something, when my heart the darkness stills, 

Shall tell me, without sound or any sight. 

That other footsteps are upon the hills ; 

Till the dim earth is luminous with the light 

Of the white dawn, from some far-hidden shore, 

That shines upon thy forehead evermore. 



FIELD NOTES' 

I 

By the wild fence-row, all grown up 

With tall oats, and the buttercup. 

And the seeded grass, and blue flax-flower, 

I fling myself in a nest of green. 

Walled about and all unseen. 

And lose myself in the quiet hour. 

Now and then from the orchard-tree 

To the sweet clover at my knee 

Hums the crescendo of a bee. 

Making the silence seem more still j 

Overhead on a maple prong 

The least of birds, a jeweled sprite. 

With burnished throat and needle bill, 

Wags his head in the golden light. 

Till it flashes, and dulls, and flashes bright, 

Cheeping his microscopic song. 

II 

Far up the hill-farm, where the breeze 

Dips its wing in the billowy grain. 

Waves go chasing from the plain 

On softly undulating seas ; 

Now near my nest they swerve and turn, 

' Written for the graduating class of i88z, at Smith College, North- 
ampton, Mass. 



!oS FIELD NOTES 

And now go wandering without aim ; 

Ot vonder, where the poppies burn, 

R.icc up the slope in hannless flame. 

Sometiines the bold wind swavs mv walls, 

Mv four green u-alls of the grass and oats. 

But never a slender column falls. 

And the blue skv-roof above them floats. 

Cool in the glowing sun I feel 

On wrist and cheek the sea-breeze steal 

From the wholesome ocean brine. 

The air is full of the whispering pine. 

Surf-sound of an aerial sea ; 

And the light clashing, near and far. 

As of mimic shield and scimi^ar, 

Of the slim Australian tree. 

Ill 

So all that azure day 

In the lap of the green world I lav ; 

And drinking of the sunshine's flood. 

Like Sigurd when the dragon's blood 

^Llde the bird-songs understood. 

Inward or outward I could hear 

A murmuring of music near ; 

And this is what it seemed to sav : — 

IV 

Old earth, how beautiful thou art ! 
Though restless fancv wander wide 



FIELD NOTES 299 

And sigh in dreams for spheres more blest. 
Save for some trouble, half-confessed, 
Some least misgiving, all my heart 
With such a world were satisfied. 
Had every day such skies of blue. 
Were men all wise, and wimicn true. 
Might youth as calm as manhood be, 
And might calm manhood keep its lore 
And still be young — and one thing more. 
Old earth were fair enough for me. 

Ah, sturdy world, old patient world ! 
Thou hast seen many times and men ; 
Heard jibes and curses at thee hurled 
From cynic lip and peevish pen. 
But give the mother once her due : 
Were women wise, and men all true — 
And one thing more that may not be. 
Old earth were fair enouo-h for me. 



If only we were worthier found 

Of the stout ball that bears us round ! 

New wants, new ways, pert plans of change, 

New answers to old questions strange; 

But to the older questions still 

No new replies have come, or will. 

New speed to buzz abroad and see 

Cities where one needs not to be ; 



300 FIELD NOTES 

But no new w.iv to dwell at home, 

Or there to malce great friendships come ; 

No novel wav to seek or find 

True hearts and the heroic mind. 

Of atom force and chemic stew 

Nor Socrates nor Cicsar knew, 

But the old ages knew a plan — 

The lost art — how to mould a man. 

VI 

World, wise old world. 
What mav man do for thee ? 
Thou that an greater than all of us, 
What wilt thou do to me ? 
This glossv curve of the tall grass-spear — 
Can I make its lustrous green more clear ? 
This tapering shaft of oat, that knows 
To grow erect as the great pine grows. 
And to swav in the wind as well as he — 
Can I teach it to nod more graciously ? 
The lark on the mossv rail so nigh, 
Warv, but pleased if I keep my place — 
\Vho could give a single grace 
To his flute-note sweet and high. 
Or help him hnd his nest hard by ? 
Can I add to the poppv's gold one bit ? 
Can I deepen the sky, or soften it ? 



FIELD NOTES 301 

VII 

^ons ago a rock crashed down 

From a mountain's crown, 

Where a tempest's tread 

Crumbled it from its hold. 

Ages dawn and in turn grow old : 

The rock lies still and dead. 

Flames come and floods come, 

Sea rolls this mountain crumb 

To a pebble, in its play ; 

Till at the last man came to be, 

And a thousand generations passed away. 

Then from the bed of a brook one day 

A boy with the heart of a king 

Fitted the stone to his shepherd sling, 

And a giant fell, and a royal race was free- 

Not out of any cloud or sky 

Will thy good come to prayer or cry. 

Let the great forces, wise of old. 

Have their whole way with thee. 

Crumble thy heart from its hold. 

Drown thy life in the sea. 

And aeons hence, some day. 

The love thou gavest a child. 

The dream in a midnight wild. 

The word thou wouldst not say — 

Or in a whisper no one dared to hear. 

Shall gladden the earth and bring the golden year 



3.- FIELD NOTES 

VI II 

Just now a spark of fire 
FLishcd tVom a builder's saw 
On the ribs ot" a n.xit' a mile aw.iy. 
His has been the better dav. 
Gone not in dreams, nor even the subtle desire 
Not to desirf ; 
Rut work is the sober law 
He knows well to obev. 
It is a poem he tits and fashions well ; 
And the five chambers are five acts of it : 
Hope in one shall dwell, 
In another fear will sit ; 
In the chamber on the east 
Shall be the bridal feast ; 
In the western one 
The dead shall lie alone. 
So the cycles of life shall fill 

The clean, pine-scented rooms where now he works 
his will. 

IX 

Might one be healed from fevenng thought, 

And onlv look, each night, 

On some plain work well wa>ught. 

Or if a man as right and true might be 

As a flower or tree ! 

I would give up all the mind 



FIELD NOTES 303 

In the prim city's hoard can find — 

House with its scrap-art bedight, 

Straitened manners of the street, 

Smooth-voiced society — 

If so the swiftness of the wind 

Might pass into my*feet ; 

If so the sweetness of the wheat 

Into my soul might pass, 

And the clear courage of the grass ; 

If the lark caroled in my song; 

If one tithe of the faithfulness 

Of the bird-mother with her brood 

Into my selfish heart might press, 

And make me also instinct-good. 

X 

Life is a game the soul can play 

With fewer pieces than men say. 

Only to grow as the grass grows. 

Prating not of joys or woes ; 

To burn as the steady hearth-fire burns ; 

To shine as the star can shine. 

Or only as the mote of dust that turns 

Darkling and twinkling in the beam of light divine; 

And for my wisdom — glad to know 

Where the sweetest beech-nuts grow. 

And to track out the spicy root, 

Or peel the musky core of the wild-berry shoot j 

And how the russet ground-bird bold 



3.-4 FIELD NOTES 

\Vith both slim toot at onco will lightlv mice the 

mould ; 
AikI whv moon-shadows from tho swaving limb 
Hero are sharp and there are dim ; 
And how the ant his /ig/ag wav can hold 
rhrough tho grass that is a grov'^ to him. 

'T wore good to live one's life alone. 

So to share life with manv a one : 

To keep a thought seven years, and then 

^^'oloomo it coming to vou 

On the wav tVom another's brain and pen, 

So to judge if it be true. 

Then would the world be fair. 

Beautiful as is the past, 

Whose beauty we can see at last. 

Since self no more is there. 

XT 

I will be glad to be and do. 

And glad of all good men that live, 

For thev are woof of nature too ; 

Glad of the poets even- one. 

Pure Longfellow, great Emerson, 

And all that Shakespeare's world can give. 

When the road is dust, and the grass dries, 

Then will I gaze on the deep skies ; 

And if Dame Nature frown in cloud. 

Well, mother — then mv heart shall sav — 



FIELD NOTES 305 

You cannot so drive me away ; 

I will still exult aloud, 

Companioned of the good hard ground, 

Whereon stout hearts of every clime, 

In the battles of all time. 

Foothold and couch have found. 

XII 

Joy to the laughing troop 

That from the threshold starts. 

Led on by courage and immortal hope. 

And with the morning in their hearts. 

They to the disappointed earth shall give 

The lives we meant to live. 

Beautiful, free, and strong; 

The light we almost had 

Shall make them glad ; 

The words we waited long 

Shall run in music from their voice and song. 

Unto our world hope's daily oracles 

From their lips shall be brought ; 

And in our lives love's hourly miracles 

By them be wrought. 

Their merry task shall be 

To make the house all fine and sweet 

Its new inhabitants to greet. 

The wondrous dawning century. 



3o6 FIELD NOTES 

XIII 

And now the close o( this fair day was come; 

The bav grew duskier on its purple floor, 

And the long curve of foam 

Drew its white net along a dimmer shore. 

Through the fading saffron light, 

Through the deepening shade of even. 

The round earth rolled into the summer night. 

And watched the kindling of the stars in heaven. 



CALIFORNIA WINTER 

This is not winter : where is the crisp air, 
And snow upon the roof, and frozen ponds, 
And the star-fire that tips the icicle ? 

Here blooms the late rose, pale and odorless; 
And the vague fragrance in the garden walks 
Is but a doubtful dream of mignonette. 
In some smooth spot, under a sleeping oak 
That has not dreamed of such a thing as spring, 
The ground has stolen a kiss from the cool sun 
And thrilled a little, and the tender grass 
Has sprung untimely, for these great bright days, 
Staring upon it, will not let it live. 
The sky is blue, and 't is a goodly time. 
And the round, barren hillsides tempt the feet; 
But 't is not winter : such as seems to man 
What June is to the roses, sending floods 
Of life and color through the tingling veins. 

It is a land without a fireside. Far 
Is the old home, where, even this very night. 
Roars the great chimney with its glorious fire. 
And old friends look into each other's eyes 
Quietly, for each knows the other's trust. 



3o8 CALIFORNIA WINTER 

Heaven is not far awav such winter nights : 
The big white stars are sparkling in the cast, 
And glitter in the gaze of solemn eves ; 
For many things have faded with the flowers, 
And manv things their resurrection wait ; 
Earth like a sepulchre is sealed with frost, 
And Morn and Even beside the silent door 
Sit watching, and their soft and folded wings 
Are white with featherv snow. 

Yet c\ en here 
We are not quite forgotten bv the Hours, 
Could human eves but see the beautiful 
Save through the glamour of a memorv. 
Soon comes the strong south wind, and shouts aloud 
Its jubilant anthem. Soon the singing rain 
Comes from warm seas, and in its skvcy tent 
Enwraps the drowsv world. And when, some night, 
Its flowing folds invisiblv withdraw, 
Lo ! the new life in all created things ! 
The azure mountains and the ocean gates 
Against the lovelv skv stand clean and clear 
As a new purpose in the wiser soul. 



THE LOVER'S SONG 

Lend me thy fillet, Love ! 

I would no longer see ; 
Cover mine eyelids close awhile, 

And make me blind like thee. 

Then might I pass her sunny face, 

And know not it was fair; 
Then might I hear her voice, nor guess 

Her starry eyes were there. 

Ah ! banished so from stars and sun » 

Why need it be my fate ? 
If only she might deem me good 

And wise, and be my mate I 

Lend her thy fillet, Love ! 

Let her no longer see : 
If there is hope for me at all. 

She must be blind like thee. 



RECALL 

" Love me, or I am slain ! " I cried, and meant 
Bitterly true each word. Nights, morns, slipped by, 
Moons, circling suns, yet still alive am I ; 
But shame to me, if my best time be spent 

On this perverse, blind passion ! Are we sent 
Upon a planet just to mate and die, 
A man no more than some pale butterfly 
That yields his day to nature's sole intent ? 

Or is my life but Marguerite's ox-eyed flower, 

That I should stand and pluck and fling away, 

One after one, the petal of each hour. 

Like a love-dreamy girl, and only say, 

"Loves me," and "loves me not," and "loves me"? 

Nay! 
Let the man's mind awake to manhood's power. 



THE REFORMER 

Before the monstrous wrong he sets him down — 
One man against a stone-walled city of sin. 
For centuries those walls have been a-building; 
Smooth porphyry, they slope and coldly glass 
The flying storm and wheeling sun. No chink, 
No crevice lets the thinnest arrow in. 
He fights alone, and from the cloudy ramparts 
A thousand evil faces gibe and jeer him. 
Let him lie down and die : what is the right, 
And where is justice, in a world like this ? 
But by and by, earth shakes herself, impatient ; 
And down, in one great roar of ruin, crash 
Watch-tower and citadel and battlements. 
When the red dust has cleared, the lonely soldier 
Stands with strange thoughts beneath the friendly 
stars. 



DESIRE OF SLEEP 

It is not death I mean, 
Nor even forgetfulness, 
But healthful human sleep, 
Dreamless, and still, and deep, 
\\ here I would hide and glean 
Some heavenly halm to bless. 

I would not die; I long 
To live, to see mv davs 
Bud once again, and bloom. 
And make amidst them room 
For thoughts like birds of song, 
Out-winging happy ways. 

I would not even forget : 
Onlv, a little while — 
Just now — I cannot bear 
Remembrance with despair; 
The years are coming vet 

When I shall look, and smile. 

Not now — oh, not to-night ! 
Too clear on midnight's deep 



DESIRE OF SLEEP 313 

Come voice and hand and touch ; 
The heart aches overmuch — 

Hush sounds! shut out the light! 

A little I must sleep. 



KVK'S DAl'GHTFR 

I WAITED in the little sunnv rov^m : 

The ovvl brec.'c \ravevl the \vindvnv-l.icc, at plav. 
The wh-.to rv>se on the porch was all in bloom. 

And out upr.Mi the hay 
I watched the wheeling sea-birds go and oome. 

** Such an old friend, — sho would not make me stay 

While she K>und up her hair." I turned, and lo, 
Danae in her shower I and tit to slay 

All a man's hoarded prudence at a blow : 
Gold hair, that streamed an-ay 

As rv^und some nvmph a sunlit tounrain's flow. 
" She would not make me wa.it I " — but well I know 

She took a gvxnl half-hour to loose and lay 
Those locks in dazzling disarrangement so ! 



A HYMN OF HOrE 

FOR TMK HUNDRKDIH ANNIVKRSARV OF PHILLIPS 
KXKTKR ACAUKMY 

Has, tluMi, our boyhood vanished, 

And ros\- morning fled ? 
Arc faith and ardor banished. 

Is darinij; courajj-e dead ? 
Still runs the olden river 

Hy meadow, hill, and wood, — 
Where are the hearts that ever 

Beat high with royal blood ? 

The golden dreams we cherished 

Pacing the ancient town, — 
Have they but bloomed and perished, 

And flown like thistledown ? 
Nav, still the air is haunted 

With mystery as of old ; 
Each blossom is enchanted. 

And every leaflet's fold. 

Not one fair hope we hearkened. 

But still to youth returns ; 
Not one clear light hath darkened, — 

Still for some breast it burns : 



310 A HYMN OF WOVE 

Though ago bv .igc is King 
Beneath the g;ithering mould, 

Lite's dawn-light is undving. 
Its dreams grow never old. 

As the great faithful planet 

Goes plunging on its track, 
Thought still shall bravclv man it. 

And steer through storn^ .\i\d wrack j 
While but three souls are toiling 

Who would give all tor right. 
Whom gold nor fame is spoiling, 

Whose praver is but for light; 

While there are found a handful 

Of spirits \ owed to truth, 
Clear-eved, courageous, manful, 

And comrades as in youth ; 
Out of the darkness sunward, 

Out of the night to day, 
While all the worlds swing onward. 

Life shall not lose its way. 

When to the man-soul lonelv 
The loving gvxls came down, 

Earth g;ive the mantle only. 

Free mind the immortal crown. 

Wild force with cloud-wniith stature 
Unsealed shall tower in vain, 



A HYMN OF HOPE 317 

And the fierce Afreet, Nature, 
Obey the sceptred brain. 

O heart of man immortal, 

Beat on in love and cheer! 
Somewhere the cloudy portal 

Of all thy prayers shall clear. 
The fair earth's mighty measure 

Of life, untouched by rime. 
Through star-dust and through azure 

Rolls on to endless time. 

The power that motes inherit, 

That bud and crystal find. 
Hath not forgotten spirit. 

Nor left the soul behind. 
O'er Time's dumb forces fleeting 

This victory we begin, 
Dear eye-beams and the beating 

Of heart with heart shall win. 



AN ANCIENT ERROR 

He that has and a little tiny wit, — 

With hey, ho, the wind and the rain, — -Lear 

The " sobbing wind," the " weeping rain," 

'T is time to give the lie 
To these old superstitions twain, 

That poets sing and sigh. 

Taste the sweet drops, — no tang of brine ; 

Feel them, — they do not burn ; 
The daisy-buds, whereon they shine, 

Laugh, and to blossoms turn. 

There is no natural grief or sin ; 

'T is we have flung the pall. 
And brought the sound of sorrow in* 

Pan is not dead at all. 

The merry Pan ! his blithesome look 
Twinkles through sun and rain ; 

By ivied rock and rippled brook 
He pipes his jocund strain. 

If winds have wailed and skies wept tears- 
To poet's vision dim. 



AN ANCIENT ERROR 319 

'T was that his own sobs filled his ears, 
His weeping blinded him. 

'Tis laughing breeze and singing shower, 

As ever heart could need ; 
And who with " hey " and " ho " must lower 

Hath " tiny wit " indeed. 



AN ADAGE FROM THE ORIENT 

At the punch-bowl's brink, 
Lot the thirstv think 
What thev say in Japan : 

" First the man takes a drink. 
Then the drink takes a drink. 
Then the drink takes the man ! " 



7X) A MAID DEMURE 

Often when the night is come, 
With its quiet group at home, 
While they broider, knit, or sew., 
Read, or chat in voices low. 
Suddenly you lift your eyes 
With an earnest look, and wise ; 
But I cannot read their lore, — 
Tell me less, or tell me more. 

Like a picture in a book. 
Pure and peaceful is your look, 
Quietly you walk your ways; 
Steadfast duty fills the days. 
Neither tears nor fierce delights, 
P'cverish days nor tossing nights. 
Any troublous dreams confess, — 
Tell me more, or tell me less. 

Swift the weeks are on the wing; 
Years are brief, and love a thing 
Blooming, fading, like a flower; 
Wake and seize the little hour. 
Give me welcome, or farewell ; 
Quick! I wait! And who can tell 
What to-morrow may befall, — 
Love me more, or not at all. 



HERMIONE 



THE LOST MAGIC 



White in her snowy stone, and cold, 
With azure veins and shining arms, 

Pygmalion doth his bride behold, 

Rapt on her pure and sculptured charms. 

Ah ! in those half-divine old days 
Love still worked miracles for men ; 

The gods taught lovers wondrous ways 
To breathe a soul in marble then. 

He gazed, he yearned, he vowed, he wept. 

Some secret witchery touched her breast ; 
And, laughing April tears, she stepped 

Down to his arms and lay at rest. 

Dear artist of the stoned land ! 

I too have loved a heart of stone. 
What was thy charm of voice or hand, 

Thy secret spell, Pygmalion ? 



HERMIONE 323 

II 

INFLUENCES 

If quiet autumn mornings would not come, 

With golden light, and haze, and harvest wain, 

And spices of the dead leaves at my feet ; 

If sunsets would not burn through cloud, and stain 

With fading rosy flush the dusky dome ; 

If the young mother would not croon that sweet 

Old sleep-song, like the robin's in the rain ; 

If the great cloud-ships would not float and drift 

Across such blue all the calm afternoon ; 

If night were not so hushed ; or if the moon 

Might pause forever by that pearly rift. 

Nor fill the garden with its flood again ; 

If the world were not what it still must be. 

Then might I live forgetting love and thee. 

Ill 

THE DEAD LETTER 

The letter came at last. I carried it 
To the deep woods unopened. All the trees 
Were hushed, as if they waited what was writ. 
And feared for me. Silent they let me sit 
Among them; leaning breathless while I read, 
And bending down above me where they stood. 
A long way off I heard the delicate tread 
Of the light-footed loiterer, the breeze. 
Come walking toward me in the leafy wood. 



324 HERMIONE 

I burned the page that brought me love and woe. 
At first It writhed to feel the spires of flame, 
Then lay quite still j and o'er each word there came 
Its white ghost of the ash, and burning slow 
Each said : " You cannot kill the spirit ; know 
That we shall haunt you, even till heart and brain 
Lie as we lie in ashes — all in vain." 

IV 

THE SONG IN THE NIGHT 

In the deep night a little bird 

Wakens, or dreams he is awake : 

Cheerily clear one phrase is heard. 

And you almost feel the morning break. 

In the deep dark of loss and wrong. 

One face like a lovely dawn will thrill, 

And all night long at my heart a song 
Suddenly stirs and then is still. 



TRUTH AT LAST 

Does a man ever give up hope, I wonder, — 
Face the grim fact, seeing it clear as day ? 
When Bennen saw the snow slip, heard its thunder 
Low, louder, roaring round him, felt the speed 
Grow swifter as the avalanche hurled downward, 
Did he for just one heart-throb — did he indeed 
Know with all certainty, as they swept onward. 
There was the end, where the crag dropped away ? 
Or did he think, even till they plunged and fell. 
Some miracle would stop them ? Nay, they tell 
That he turned round, face forward, calm and pale, 
Stretching his arms out toward his native vale 
As if in mute, unspeakable farewell. 
And so went down. — 'T is something, if at last. 
Though only for a flash, a man may see 
Clear-eyed the future as he sees the past. 
From doubt, or fear, or hope's illusion free. 



UNTIMELY THOUGHT 

I LOOKED across the lawn one summer's day, 
Deep shadowed, dreaming in the drowsy light, 
And thought, what if this afternoon, so bright 

And still, should end it ? — as it may. 

Blue dome, and flocks of fleece that slowly pass 
Before the pale old moon, the while she keeps 
Her sleepy watch, and ancient pear that sweeps 

Its low, fruit-laden skirts along the grass. 

What if I had to say to all of these, 

" So this is the last time " — suddenly there 
My love came loitering under the great trees ; 

And now the thought I could no longer bear ; 
Startled I flung it from me, as one flings 
All sharply from the hand a bee that stings. 



^ 



SERVICE 

Fret not that the day is gone. 
And thy task is still undone. 
'Twas not thine, it seems, at all: 
Near to thee it chanced to fall, 
Close enough to stir thy brain. 
And to vex thy heart in vain. 
Somewhere, in a nook forlorn, 
Yesterday a babe was born : 
He shall do thy waiting task ; 
All thy questions he shall ask. 
And the answers will be given. 
Whispered lightly out of heaven. 
His shall be no stumbling feet. 
Falling where they should be fleet : 
He shall hold no broken clue ; 
Friends shall unto him be true ; 
Men shall love him ; falsehood's aim 
Shall not shatter his good name. 
Day shall nerve his arm with light. 
Slumber soothe him all the night ; 
Summer's peace and winter's storm 
Help him all his will perform. 
'T is enough of joy for thee 
His high service to foresee. 



ON A PICTURE OF MT. SHASTA BY 
KEITH 

Two craggy slopes, sheer down on either hand, 

Fall to a cleft, dark and confused with pines. 

Out of their sombre shade — one gleam of light — 

Escaping toward us like a hurrying child. 

Half laughing, half afraid, a white brook runs. 

The fancy tracks it back through the thick gloom 

Of crowded trees, immense, mysterious 

As monoliths of some colossal temple. 

Dusky with incense, chill with endless time : 

Through their dim arches chants the distant wind, 

Hollow and vast, and ancient oracles 

Whisper, and wait to be interpreted. 

Far up the gorge denser and darker grows 

The forest ; columns lie with writhen roots in air, 

And across open glades the sunbeams slant 

To touch the vanishing wing-tips of shy birds ; 

Till from a mist-rolled valley soar the slopes. 

Blue-hazy, dense with pines to the verge of snow. 

Up into cloud. Suddenly parts the cloud. 

And lo ! in heaven — as pure as very snow, 

Uplifted like a solitary world — 

A star, grown all at once distinct and clear, — 

The white earth-spirit, Shasta ! Calm, alone. 



ON A PICTURE OF MT. SHASTA 329 

Silent it stands, cold in the crystal air, 
White-bosontied sister of the stainless dawn, 
With whom the cloud holds converse, and the storm 
Rests there, and stills its tempest into snow. 

Once — you remember? — we beheld that vision, 

But busy days recalled us, and the whole 

Fades now among my memories like a dream. 

The distant thing is all incredible. 

And the dim past as if it had not been. 

Our world flees from us ; only the one point, 

The unsubstantial moment, is our own. 

We are but as the dead, save that swift mote 

Of conscious life. Then the great artist comes, 

Commands the chariot wheels of Time to stay, 

Summons the distant, as by some austere 

Grand gesture of a mighty sorcerer's wand. 

And our whole world again becomes our own. 

So we escape the petty tyranny 

Of the incessant hour; pure thought evades 

Its customary bondage, and the mind 

Is lifted up, watching the moon-like globe. 

How should a man be eager or perturbed 
Within this calm ? How should he greatly care 
For reparation, or redress of wrong, — 
To scotch the liar, or spurn the fawning knave. 
Or heed the babble of the ignoble crew ? 
Seest thou yon blur far up the icy slope. 



330 ON A PICTURE OF MT. SHASTA 

Like a man's footprint ? Half thy little town 
Might hide there, or be buried in what seems 
From yonder clifF a curl of feathery srtow. 
Still the far peak would keep its frozen calm, 
Still at the evening on its pinnacle 
Would the one tender touch of sunset dwell, 
And o'er it nightlong wheel the silent stars. 
So the great globe rounds on, — mountains, and vales, 
Forests, waste stretches of gaunt rock and sand. 
Shore, and the swaying ocean, — league on league ; 
And blossoms open, and are sealed in frost ; 
And babes are born, and men are laid to rest. 
What is this breathing atom, that his brain 
Should build or purpose aught or aught desire, 
But stand a moment in amaze and awe. 
Rapt on the wonderfulness of the world ? 



«QUEM METUI MORITURA?" 

JENEID, IV. 604 

What need have I to fear — so soon to die ? 
Let me work on, not watch and wait in dread : 
What will it matter, when that I am dead. 

That they bore hate or love who near me lie ? 

'T is but a lifetime, and the end is nigh 
At best or worst. Let me lift up my head 
And firmly, as with inner courage, tread 

Mine own appointed way, on mandates high. 

Pain could but bring, from all its evil store. 

The close of pain : hate's venom could but kill ; 

Repulse, defeat, desertion, could no more. 
Let me have lived my life, not cowered until 

The unhindered and unhastened hour was here. 

So soon — what is there in the world to fear? 



THE SINGER 

Silly bird ! 

When his mate is near. 

Not a note of singing shall you hear- 

Take his little love away, 

Half the livelong day 

Will his tune be heard — 

Silly bird ! 

Sunny days 

Silent basks he in the light, 

Little sybarite ! 

But when all the room 

Darkens in the gloom, 

And the rain 

Pours and pours along the pane, 

He is bent 

(Ah, the small inconsequent !) 

On defying all the weather ; 

Rain and cloud and storm together 

Naught to him, 

Singing like the seraphim. 

So we know a poet's ways : 
Sunny days, 



THE SINGER 333 

Silent he 

In his fine serenity; 
But if winds are loud, 
He will pipe beneath the cloud ; 
And if one is far away, 
Sings his heart out, as to say, — 
" It may be 
She will hear and come to me." 



WORDSWORTH 

A MOONLIT desert's yellow sands, 
Where, dimmer than its shadow, stands 
A motionless palm-tree here and there, 
And the great stars through amber air 
Burn calm as planets, and the face 
Of earth seems lifting into space : — 

A tropic ocean's starlit rest, 

Along whose smooth and sleeping breast 

Slow swells just stir the mirrored gleams, 

Like faintest sighs in placid dreams ; 

All overhead the night, so high 

And hollow that there seems no sky. 

But the unfathomed deeps, among 

The worlds down endless arches swung : - 

On moonlit plain, and starlit sea, 
Is life's lost charm, tranquillity. 

A poet found it once, and took 
It home, and hid it in a book, 
As one might press a violet. 
There still the odor lingers yet. 
Delicious ; from your treasured tomes 



WORDSWORTH 335 

Reach down your Wordsworth, and there comes 
That fragrance which no bard but he 
E'er caught, as if the plain and sea 
Had yielded their serenity. 



THE WORl.n RUNS ROUND 

For VHE AXMVIKS.VKY OK THK •'OvKKl.ANO MalIAZISE,* 

San Francisco, iSS+ 

Thk world runs round. 
And the world runs well; 
And ;u heaven's bound, 
^^' caving what the hours shall tell 
Of the future wav. 
Sit the great Norns, sisters grav. 
Now a thread ot doom and hate. 
Now a skein of life and love, — 
Whether hearing shriek or psalm, 
Heans that curse or prav, 
Most composed and very calm 
Is their wca\ ing, soon and late. 

One man's noisv vears go bv. 

Rich to the crowd's shallow eve, 

Full of big and emptv sound. 

Brandished gesture, voice profound, 

Blustering benevolence. 

Thin in deeds and poor in pence. 

Out of it all, so loud and long, 

What one thread that 's clean and strong 

To weave the coming good. 

Can the ^reat Norns find ? 



THE WORLD RUNS ROUND 337 

But where some poor child stood, 
And shrank, and wept its faultiness. 
Out of that little life so blind 
The great web takes a golden strand 
That shall shine and that shall stand 
The whole wide world to bless. 



One man walks in silk : 
Honey and milk 
Flow through his days. 
Corn loads his wains. 
He hath all men's praise, 
He sees his heart's desire. 
In all his veins 

What can the sorrowful Norns 
Find of heroic fire ? 
Another finds his ways 
All blocked and barred 
Lonely, he grapples hard, 
Sets teeth and bleeds. 
Then the glad Norns 
Know he succeeds, 
With victory wrought 
Greater than he sought. 

When will the world believe 
Force is for him that is met and fought-. 
Storm hath no song till the pine resists ; 
Lightning no flame when it runs as it lists j 



338 THE WORLD RUNS ROUND 

So do the wise Norns weave. 

The world runs round, 

And the world runs well : 

It needs no prophet, when evil is found, 

Good to foretell. 

Many the voices 
Ruffling the air : 
This one rejoices, 
That in despair 
Past the sky-bars 
Climbs to the stars. 

One voice is heard 
By the ocean's shore. 
Speaking a word 
Quiet and sane, 
Amid the human rush and roar 
Like a robin's song in the rain. 
The red gold of the sun 
Seems to stream in power 
Already from behind the shower 
When that song 's begun. 

It doth not insist, or claim; 
You may hear, or go : 
It clamors not for gain or fame, 
Tranquilly and slow / 

It speaketh unafraid. 



THE WORLD RUNS ROUND 339 

Calls the spade, spade, 

With the large sense mature 

Of him that hath both sat and roved. 

And with a solemn undercurrent pure. 

As his that now hath lived and loved. 

Brightened with glimpse and gleam 

Of mother-wit — 

There is more salt in it. 

More germ and sperm 

Of the great things to be. 

Than louder notes men speak and sing. 

It is a voice of Spring, 
Clear and firm. 
Tones prophetic in it flow. 
Steady and strong. 
Yet soft and low — 
An excellent thing in song. 
" I can wait," saith merry Spring ; 
If the rain runneth, and the wind hummeth, 
And the mount at morn be hoar with snow. 
In the frost the violet dozes, 
Wind and rain bear breath of roses. 
And the great summer cometh 
Wherein all things shall gayly bloom and grow. 
Long may the voice be found, 
Potent its spell. 
While the world runs round. 
And the world runs well. 



CARPE DIEM 

How the dull thought smites me dumb, 
" It will come ! " and " It will come ! " 
But to-day I am not dead ; 
Life in hand and foot and head 
Leads me on its wondrous ways. 
'T is in such poor, common days, 
Made of morning, noon, and night. 
Golden truth has leaped to light, 
Potent messages have sped, 
Torches flashed with running rays, 
World-runes started on their flight. 

Let it come, when come it must j 
But To-Day from out the dust 
Blooms and brightens like a flower. 
Fair with love, and faith, and power. 
Pluck it with unclouded will. 
From the great tree Igdrasil. 



AMONG THE REDWOODS 

Farewell to such a world ! Too long I press 
The crowded pavement with unwilling feet. 

Pity makes pride, and hate breeds hatefulness, 
And both are poisons. In the forest, sweet 

The shade, the peace ! Immensity, that seems 

To drown the human life of doubts and dreams. 

Far off the massive portals of the wood. 

Buttressed with shadow, misty-blue, serene, 

Waited my coming. Speedily I stood 

Where the dun wall rose roofed in plumy green. 

Dare one go in ? — Glance backward ! Dusk as 
night 

Each column, fringed with sprays of amber light. 

Let me, along this fallen bole, at rest, 

Turn to the cool, dim roof my glowing face. 

Delicious dark on weary eyelids prest ! 
Enormous solitude of silent space. 

But for a low and thunderous ocean sound. 

Too far to hear, felt thrilling through the ground ! 

No stir nor call the sacred hush profanes ; 

Save when from some bare treetop, far on high, 



342 AMONG THE REDWOODS 

Fierce disputations of the clamorous cranes 
Fall muffled, as from out the upper sky. 
So still, one dreads to wake the dreaming air, 
Breaks a twig softly, moves the foot with care. 

The hollow dome is green with empty shade. 
Struck through with slanted shafts of afternoon ; 

Aloft, a little rift of blue is made. 

Where slips a ghost that last night was the moon ; 

Beside its pearl a sea-cloud stays its wing. 

Beneath a tilted hawk is balancing. 

The heart feels not in every time and mood 
What is around it. Dull as any stone 

I lay ; then, like a darkening dream, the wood 
Grew Karnak's temple, where I breathed alone 

In the awed air strange incense, and uprose 

Dim, monstrous columns in their dread repose. 

The mind not always sees ; but if there shine 
A bit of fern-lace bending over moss, 

A silky glint that rides a spider-line. 

On a trefoil two shadow-spears that cross. 

Three grasses that toss up their nodding heads. 

With spring and curve like clustered fountain^ 
threads, — 

Suddenly, through side windows of the eye. 
Deep solitudes, where never souls have met; 



AMONG THE REDWOODS 343 

Vast spaces, forest corridors that lie 

In a mysterious world, unpeopled yet. 
Because the outward eye elsewhere was caught, 
The awfulness and wonder come unsought. 

If death be but resolving back again 

Into the world's deep soul, this is a kind 

Of quiet, happy death, untouched by pain 
Or sharp reluctance. For I feel my mind 

Is interfused with all I hear and see ; 

As much a part of All as cloud or tree. 

Listen ! A deep and solemn wind on high ; 

The shafts of shining dust shift to and fro; 
The columned trees sway imperceptibly, 

And creak as mighty masts when trade-winds blow. 
The cloudy sails are set; the earth-ship swings 
Along the sea of space to grander things. 



AT DAWN 

I LAY a\v:ikc and listened, ere the light 
Began to whiten at the window pane. 
The world was all asleep : earth was a fane 
Emptied ot" worshipers ; its dome ot night. 
Its silent aisles, were awful in their gloom. 
Suddenlv from the tower the bell struck four, 
Solemn and slow, how slow and solemn ! o'er 
Those death-like slumbcrers, each within his room. 
The last reverberation pulsed so long 
It seemed no tone of earthlv mould at all. 
But the bell woke a thrush ; and with a call 
He roused his mate, then poured a tide of song : 
^' Morning is coming, fresh, and clear, and blue," 
Said that bright song j and then I thought of you. 



Hf:R FACE 

I STOOD in sombre dreaming 
Before her image dear, 

And saw, in secret wonder, 
Living my darling appear. 

About her mouth a smile came. 
So wonderful and wise. 

And tears of some still sorrow 
Seemed shining in her eyes. 

My tears, they too were flowing^ 
Her face I could not see, 

And oh ! I cannot believe it, 
That my love is lost to me. 



LATER POEMS 



A MORNING THOUGHT 

What if some morning, when the stars were paling. 
And the dawn whitened, and the East was clear. 

Strange peace and rest fell on me from the presence 
Of a benignant Spirit standing near: 

And I should tell him, as he stood beside me, 

" This is our Earth — most friendly Earth, and 
fail ; 

Daily its sea and shore through sun and shadow 
Faithful it turns, robed in its azure air : 

" There is blest living here, loving and serving. 
And quest of truth, and serene friendships dear; 

But stay not. Spirit ! Earth has one destroyer, — 
His name is Death : flee, lest he find thee here ! " 

And what if then, while the still morning brightened. 
And freshened in the elm the Summer's breath, 

Should gravely smile on me the gentle angel 

And take my hand and say, " My name is Death ! " 



STRANGE 

He died at night. Next day they came 
To weep and praise him : sudden fame 
These suddenly warm comrades gave. 
They called him pure, they called him brave j 
One praised his heart, and one his brain ; 
All said, You'd seek his like in vain, — 
Gentle, and strong, and good : none saw 
In all his character a flaw. 

At noon he wakened from his trance, 
Mended, was well ! They looked askance j 
Took his hand coldly ; loved him not. 
Though they had wept him ; quite forgot 
His virtues ; lent an easy ear 
To slanderous tongues ; professed a fear 
He was not what he seemed to be ; 
Thanked God they were not such as he ; 
Gave to his hunger stones for bread ; 
And nriade him, living, wish him dead. 



MOODS 

Dawn has blossomed : the sun is nigh : 
Pearl and rose in the wimpled sky, 
Rose and pearl on a brightening blue. 
(She is true, and she is true !) 

The noonday lies all warm and still 
And calm, and over sleeping hill 
And wheatfields falls a dreamy hue. 
(If she be true — if she be true !) 

The patient evening comes, most sad and fair : 
Veiled are the stars ; the dim and quiet air 
Breathes bitter scents of hidden myrrh and rue. 
(If she were true — if she were only true !) 



THE BOOK OF HOURS 

As one who reads a tale writ in a tongue 
He only partly knows, — runs over it 
And follows but the story, losing wit 

And charm, and half the subtle links among 

The haps and harms that the book's folk beset, — 
So do we with our life. Night comes, and morn 
I know that one has died and one is born ; 

That this by love and that by hate is met. 

But all the grace and glory of it fail 

To touch me, and the meanings they enfold. 

The Spirit of the World hath told the tale, 
And tells it : and 't is very wise and old. 

But o'er the page there is a mist and veil : 
I do not know the tongue in which 't is told. 



" WORDS, WORDS, WORDS " 

TO ONE WHO FLOUTED THEM AS VAIN , 

I 

Am I not weary of them as your heart 
Or ever Hamlet's was? — the empty ones, 
Mere breath of passing air, mere hollow tones 
That idle winds to broken reeds impart. 

Have they not cursed my life ? — sounds I mistook 
For sacred verities, — love, faith, delight. 
And the sweet tales that women tell at night. 
When darkness hides the falsehood of the look. 

I was the one of all Ulysses' crew 

(What time he stopped their ears) that leaped and fled 

Unto the sirens, for the honey-dew 

Of their dear songs. The poets me have fed 
With the same poisoned fruit. And even you, — 
Did you not pluck them for me in days dead ? i 

II 

Nay, they do bear a blessing and a power, — 
Great words and true, that bridge from soul to soul 
The awful cloud-depths that betwixt us roll, 
I will not have them so blasphemed. This hour, 



"WORDS, WORDS, WORDS" 351 

This little hour of life, this lean to-day, — 
What were it worth but for those mighty dreams 
That sweep from down the past on sounding streams 
Of such high-thoughted words as poets say ? 

What, but for Shakespeare's and for Homer's lay. 
And bards whose sacred names all lips repeat ? 
Words, — only words; yet, save for tongue and pen 

Of those great givers of them unto men, 
And burdens they still bear of grave or sweet, 
This world were but for beasts, a darkling den. 



FOUR SONNETS FROM SULLY PRUD- 
HOMME 

SIESTA 

All summer let me lie along the grass, 

Hands under head, and lids that almost close ; 

Nor mix a sigh with breathings of the rose, 
Nor vex light-sleeping echo with "Alas ! " 
Fearless, I will abandon blood, and limb. 

And very soul to the all-changing hours ; 

In calmness letting the unnumbered powers 
Of nature weave my rest into their hymn. 
Beneath the sunshine's golden tent uplift 

Mine eyes shall watch the upper blue unfurled, 
Till its deep joy into my heart shall sift 

Through lashes linked, and, dreaming on the world. 
Its love and hate, or memories far of these. 
Shall lull me like the sound of distant seas. 



FOUR SONNETS FROM PRUDHOMME 353 

THE CLOUD 

Couched on the turf, and lying mute and still, 

While the deep heaven lifts higher and more pure, 
I love to watch, as if some hidden lure 

It followed, one light cloud above the hill. 

The flitting film takes many an aspect strange : 
An orchard's snow ; a far-off^, sunlit sail ; 
A flieck of foam ; a seraph's floating veil. 

We see it altered, never see it change. 

Now a soft shred detaches, fades from sight ; 
Another comes, melts, and the blue is clear 

And clearer, as when breath has dimmed the steel. 
Such is my changeful spirit, year by year: 

A sigh, the soul of such a cloud, as light 

And vanishing, lost in the infinite. 

IN SEPARATION 

The bliss that happy lovers dream will bloom 
Forever new shall scarce outlast the year : 
Their calmer kisses wake nor smile nor tear; 
Love's nesting-place already is its tomb. 
Since sated eyes grow weary of their prey. 
And constant vows their own best hopes betray. 
And love's June lily, marred but by a breath. 
Falls where the other lilies lie in death. 
Therefore the doom of land and sea that bar 
My life from hers I do accept. At least 
No passion will rise jaded from the feast, 



354 FOUR SONNETS FROM PRUDHOMME 

My pure respect no passing fires can stain ; 
So without hope I love her, without pain, 
Without desire, as one might love a star. 

L* AMOUR ASSASSINE 

Poor wretch! that smites, in his despair insane, 
The tender mouth for which he has no bread. 
And in some lonely spot, ere it be dead. 

Covers the little corse, yet warm, ill-slain : 

So I struck down dear Love for being born ! 

I smoothed the limbs, and closed the eyes, and lone 
The darling form was left, 'neath ponderous stones; 

Then, at my deed dismayed, I fled forlorn. 

I deemed my love was dead indeed, in vain ! 
Erect he speaks, close by the open tomb, 
'Mid April lilacs even there in bloom. 
With immortelles his pale brow glorified : 
"Thou didst but wound ; I live to seek her side ; 

Not by thy hand, not thine, can I be slain ! " 



MY PEACE THOU ART 

After Schubert's " Du bist mein' Ruh"* 

My peace thou art, thou art my rest ; 
From thee my pain, in thee so blest : 
Enter mine eyes, this heart draw near ; 
Oh come, oh dwell forever here. 

Enter, and close the door, and come, 
And be this breast thine endless home ; 
Shut out all lesser care and woe, 
I would thy hurt and healing know. 

Clear light that on my soul hath shone. 
Still let it shine from thee alone, 
From thee alone. 



MIR AUS DEN AUGEN 
From a Polish Song of Chopin 

" Away ! Let not mine eyes, my heart, behold you ! " 
It was your right to choose ; I heard you say, 

" Forget ! We must forget ! " Love might have told 
you 
'T was vain. You could not, more than I, obey. 

As the dim shadows down the pastures lengthen. 
The further sinks the day-star's fading fire. 

So in your breast will tender memories strengthen. 
Deeper and darker as my steps retire. 

At every hour, in every place of meeting, 
Where we together shared delight and pain, 

Yes, everywhere will dear thoughts keep repeating, 
*'Here, too, his voice, his look, his touch, remain! ^ 



THE ORACLE 

Down in its crystal hollow 
Gleams the ebon well of ink: 

In the deepest drop lies lurking 
The thought all men shall think. 

Fair on the waiting tablet 

Lies the empty paper's space : 

Out of its snow shall flush a word 
Like an angel's earnest face. 

Who in those depths shall cast his line 
For the gnome that hugs that thought I 

Who from the snowy field shall charm 
That flower of truth untaught ? 

Not in the lore of the ancients, 

Not in the yesterday : 
On the lips of the living moments 

The gods their message lay. 

Somewhere near it is waiting, 

Like a night-wind wandering free, 

Seeking a mouth to speak through,^ 
Whose shall the message be ? 



358 THE ORACLE 

It may steal forth like a flute note, 

It may be suddenly hurled 
In blare upon blare of a trumpet blast, 

To startle and stir the world. 

Hark ! but just on the other side 
Some thinnest wall of dreams, 

Murmurs a whispered music, 
And softest rose-light gleams. 

Listen, and watch, and tell the world 
What it almost dies to know : 

Or wait — and the wise old world will say, 
" I knew it long ago." 



TEMPTED 

Yes, I know what you say : 

Since it cannot be soul to soul. 

Be it flesh to flesh, as it may ; 
But is Earth the whole ? 

Shall a man betray the Past 
For all Earth gives ? 
♦' But the Past is dead ? " At last, 
It is all that lives. 

Which were the nobler goal — 
To snatch at the moment's bliss, 

Or to swear I will keep my soul 
Clean for her kiss ? '^ 



FORCE 

The stars know a secret 

They do not tell ; 
And morn brings a message 

Hidden well. 

There 's a blush on the apple, 

A tint on the wing, 
And the bright wind whistles. 

And the pulses sting. 

Perish dark memories ! 

There 's light ahead ; 
This world 's for the living ; 

Not for the dead. 

In the shining city, 

On the loud pave. 
The life-tide is running 

Like a leaping wave. 

How the stream quickens. 
As noon draws near. 

No room for loiterers. 
No time for fear. 



FORCE 361 

Out on the farm lands 
Earth smiles as well ; 

Gold-crusted grain-fields, 
With sweet, warm smell ; 

Whir of the reaper, 

Like a giant bee ; 
Like a Titan cricket, 

Thrilling with glee. 

On mart and meadow. 

Pavement or plain. 
On azure mountain, 

Or azure main — 

Heaven bends in blessing; 

Lost is but won ; 
Goes the good rain-cloud. 

Comes the good sun ! 

Only babes whimper. 

And sick men wail. 
And faint hearts and feeble hearts 

And weaklings fail. 

Down the great currents 

Let the boat swing ; 
There was never winter 

But brought the spring. 



INFIRMITY 

What is the truth to believe, 

What is the right to be done ? 
Caught in the webs I weave 

I halt from sun to sun. 

The bright wind flows along, 

Calm nature's streaming law. 
And its stroke is soft and strong 

As a leopard's velvet paw. 

Free of the doubting mind, 

Full of the olden power. 
Are the tree, and the bee, and the wind, 

And the wren, and the brave may-flower. 

Man was the last to appear, 

A glow at the close of day ; 
Slow clambering now in fear 

He gropes his slackened way. 

All the up-thrust is gone, 

Force that came from of old, 
Up through the fish, and the swan, 

And the sea-king's mighty mould. 



INFIRMITY 363 

The youth of the world is fled, 

There are omens in the sky. 
Spheres that are chilled and dead. 

And the close of an age is nigh. 

The time is too short to grieve. 
Or to choose, for the end is one : 

And what is the truth to believe. 
And what is the right to be done ? 



HER EXPLANATION 

So you have wondered at me, — guessed in vain 
What the real woman is you know so well ? 

I am a lost illusion. Some strange spell 
Once made your friend there, with his fine disdain 
Of fact, conceive me perfect. He would fain 

(But could not) see me always, as befell 

His dream to see me, plucking asphodel, 
In saffron robes, on some celestial plain. 
All that I was he marred and flung away 

In quest of what I was not, could not be, — 

Lilith, or Helen, or Antigone. 
Still he may search •, but I have had my day. 

And now the Past is all the part for me 
That this world's empty stage has left to play. 



WARNING 

Be true to me ! For there will dawn a day 
When thou wilt find the faith that now I see, 
Bow at the shrines where I must bend the knee, 
Knowing the great from small. Then lest thou say, 
" Ah me, that I had never flung away 
His love who would have stood so close to me 
Where now I walk alone," — lest there should be 
Such vain regret, Love, oh, be true ! But nay. 
Not true to me : true to thine own high quest 
Of truth; the aspiration in thy breast. 
Noble and blind, that pushes by my hand. 
And will not lean, yet cannot surely stand ; 
True to thine own pure heart, as mine to thee 
Beats true. So shalt thou best be true to me. 



AT EARLY MORN 

Walk, who will at deep of noon. 
Or stroll fantastic in the moon ; 
I would take the morning earth. 
New as at creation's birth, 
Air unbreathed, and grass untrod ; 
Where I cross the dawn-lit sod, 
Making gre<?n paths in the gray 
Of the dew that *s brushed away. 

Would some depth of holy night. 
Sacred with its starr\- light. 
Over ail my breast might roll. 
Bringing dawn unto my soul. 
That its consecrated dew 
Mi^ht refresh and make me new ! 
Then that thou and I might pace 
Some far planet, poised in space. 
Fresh as children innocent. 
In each other's love content ! 
There our feet should recommence. 
Lightened of experience. 
Morning wavs on dewy slope. 
Winged with wonder and with hope ; 
All the things we 'd thought, or done. 
Or felt before, forgot — save one I 



SUMMER NIGHT 

From the warm garden in the summer night 

All faintest odors came: the tuberose white 

Glimmered in its dark bed, and many a bloom 

Invisibly breathed spices on the gloom. 

It stirred a trouble in the man's dull heart, 

A vexing, mute unrest : " Now what thou art. 

Tell me ! " he said in anger. Something sighed, 

" I am the poor ghost of a ghost that died 

In years gone by." And he recalled of old 

A passion dead — long dead, even then — that came 

And haunted many a night like this, the same 

In their dim hush above the fragrant mould 

And glimmering flowers, and troubled all his breast. 

" Rest ! " then he cried ; " perturbed spirit, rest ! " 



HIS NEIGHBOR AS HIMSELF 

Black the storming ocean, crests that leap and 

whelm ; 
Ship a tumbling ruin, stripped of spar and helm. 
Now she shudders upward, strangled with a sea ; 
Then she hangs a moment, and the moon breaks free 
On her huddled creatures, waiting hut to drown. 
As she reels and staggers, ready to go down. 

Crash ! the glassv mountain whirls her to her grave. 

In the foam three struggle; one his love will save. | 

There 's a plank for two, but, as he lifts her there, ; 

Lo ! his rival sinking; eyes that clutch despair. ! 

Only a swift instant left him to decide, — I 

Shall he drown, and yield the other life and bride ? 1 

In the peaceful morning stays a snowy sail. i 

Two afloat, — one missing. Which one? Did he ! 

fail, — 
Coward, merely man ? Or did the great sea darken j 

eyes 
All divinely shining with self-sacrifice? 



NIGHT AND PEACE 

Night in the woods, — night: 

Peace, peace on the plain. 
The last red sunset beam 

Belts the tall beech with gold ; 

The quiet kine are in the fold, 
And stilly flows the stream. 

Soon shall we see the stars again, 

For one more day down to its rest has lain, 
And all its cares have taken flight. 

And all its doubt and pain. 
Night in the woods, — night: 

Peace, peace on the plain. 



THE PHILOSOPHER 

His wheel of logic whirled and spun all day j 
All day he held his svstem, grinding it 
Finer and finer, till 't was fined awav. 

But the chance sparks of sense and mother-wit, 
Elung out as that wheel-logic spun and whirled. 
Kindled the nations, and lit up the world. 



HIS LOST DAY 

Growing old, and looking back 
Wistfully along his track, 
I have heard him try to tell, 
With a smile a little grim, 
Why a world he loved so well 
Had no larger fruit of him : — 

*Twas one summer, when the time 
Loitered like drowsy rhyme, 
Sauntering on his idle way 
Somehow he had lost a day. 
Whether 't was the daisies meek. 
Keeping Sabbath all the week. 
Birds without one work-day even, 
Or the little pagan bees, 
Busy all the sunny seven, — 
Whether sleep at afternoon. 
Or much rising with the moon. 
Couching with the morning star, 
Or enchantments like to these, 
Had confused his calendar, — 

" It is Saturday," men said. 

'' Nay, 't is Friday," obstinate 
Clung the notion in his head. 



372 HIS LOST DAY 

Had the cloudy sisters three, 
In their weaving of his fate. 
Dozed, and dropped a stitch astray ? 

" 'T was the losing of that day 
Cost my fortune," he would say, 

" On that day I should have writ 
Screeds of wisdom and of wit ; 
Should have sung the missing song. 
Wonderful, and sweet, and strong ; 
Might have solved men's doubt and dream 
With some waiting truth supreme. 
If another thing there be 
That a groping hand may miss 
In a twilight world like this. 
Those lost hours its grace and glee 
Surelv would have broug-ht to me." 



FULFILLMENT 

All the skies had gloomed in gray, 
Many a week, day after day. 
Nothing came the blank to fill, 
Nothing stirred the stagnant will. 
Winds were raw ; buds would not swell : 
Some malign and sullen spell 
Soured the currents of the year, 
And filled the heart with lurking fear. 

In his room he moped and glowered, 
Where the leaden daylight lowered ; 
Drummed the casement, turned his book. 
Hating nature's hostile look. 

Suddenly there came a day 
When he flung his gloom away. 
Something hinted help was near : 
Winds were fresh and sky was clear ; 
Light he stepped, and firmly planned, — 
Some good news was close at hand 

Truly : for when day was done. 
He was lying all alone. 



374 FULFILLMENT 

Fretted pulse had ceased to beat, 
Verv still were hands and teet. 
And the robins through the long 
Twilight sang his slumber song. 



THE RETURN TO ARCADIA 

From Athens, Rome, and Asia, 
The scattered troop returns. They are 
Old comrades, who have felt, afar, 
'■'■ Et ego in Jrcadia." 

" Come, friends ! now that the table's cleared, 
And flesh and fowl have disappeared, 
Let us recount to one another 
Our treatment from the world, our mother. 
Urbanus^ thou who hast a home 
In the great metropole of Rome, 
What canst thou say in blame or praise 
Of the rich city's latest ways ? " 

*' What ! tempt an old boy thus to tell 
Tales out of school ? Must I ? Ah, well, 
Among ourselves perhaps I may : 
For Rome it is the crisis-day. 
The brave old city turns at bay 
Against a vile barbarian crew; 
Itself not pure as once : the new 
Aristocrats, who 've lately sprung 
Like flaunting weeds from heaps of dung, 
The novi homines — a breed 



^. 



THE RETURN TO ARCAIMA 

Of clowns tha: Sv-.v. :hcir names co.:; read, 

Thn>ng pvavc and palace, to display 

The vulgar antics of the day. 

Their wives, too senseless to be blamed. 

Half naked and all unashamed. 

Their sons with manners of the sla>"C, 

Their girls with morals of the pave. 

These shine — a scum upon the s:rt?am 

Of the great city of \x>ur dream. 

The rich on harlots waste their store. 

And brutish Gallic pla\"S, The pvv>r 

Ro: in their vermin, gnash their teeth. 

And curse the firet they cower beneath. 

Meantime the city fathers steal 

The purws of the cc»mmon weal. 

But then? an? portents in the air : 

The stem old Roman stutt is there. 

Silent and grim. The other dav, 

A robber, swaggering with his prey 

Past great ')W/?ViVj cvdumn, saw 

Flash white the letters of the law. 

And switt the statue's sleeping glaive 

Fell ringing down and smote the knave ! ** 

' Now, .■f:::.~%^\ we t"a :'. wou'.i know 
With thee and Athsr.s how things go. 
What of Brain-city r Sureir theie 
They breathe a somewhat purer air } ** 



THE RETURN TO ARCADIA 377 

" Cold, cold, i' t'.iith, and all too thin. 
Their thinkers have abolished sin, 
And virtue has become good taste. 
They 've goodness, but it goes tight-laced.. 
Your true Athcni:m likes things new; 
In all things superstitious, too. 
No temples thronged like theirs ; at least 
By women, amorous of the priest. 
At knocking spirits they turn pale, 
And trust the augurs' spectral tale; 
The slv old augurs ! who must wink 
And nudge each other, when they think. 
I saw a houseful on their knees 
Before the ghost of Pericles — 
Some lank Thessalian from the fleet, 
Chalk-visaged, stalking in a sheet. 
I saw a shrewd Ionian 
Take fortv (it-.h-hnuie from a man 
For stroking his rheumatic limb. 
And calling on the gods for him. 
At every gleam of truth they blink, 
Save what thev think their neighbors think. 
I hold with old Lucretius 
Ai2;ainst their ghostlv fudge and fuss. 
When all their gods they glibly name. 
And when I sec this life of flame 
That leaps in impotent despair 
And breaks its heart upon the air, 



378 THE RETURN TO ARCADIA 

I turn, O friends, with clasp of hands 
For you — for the divine that stands 
And faces me with human eyes 
And living deeds and dear replies." 

" Now, Rusticus^ what of thy quest 
Beyond the barriers of the West ? " 

" The earth all right ; the world all wrong. 
The birds are wise, the beasts are strong j 
The trees are virtuous, pure the air. 
And field and farm and fold are fair ; 
But as to men — ye know what are 
The thick clods of Boeotia : 
Too dull to read, too dull to think, 
Brain-sodden, with the Celtic drink, 
Till any demagogue may win 
Their plaudits, plumed however thin. 
In feverish towns impatient strive 
The angry toilers of the hive. 
Storing not honey, soon or late, 
But venom of distrust and hate. 
Bitter of heart, and blind of brain, 
They grope for better things in vain. 
And crouch like whipped hounds to the knaves 
That boast them free to bind them slaves." 

" And now, Mugwumpius^ bard and seer. 
How wags thy world, this many a year ? 



THE RETURN TO ARCADIA 379 

Far hidden in thy mountain tower. 
What is thy message of the hour ? " 

" Like hurrying life, my thought I tell 
In two words — welcome ! and farewell ! 
I 've trimmed my vines, and browned my hay, 
And fed my pheasants of Cathay, 
Watching you others try your wings. 
And pondering on the world of things. 
I trust the seasons, as they roll ; 
I trust the striving human soul. 
These ills and wrongs that gall and goad, 
I count them all as episode; 
And far beyond these years I see 
The dawn of golden destiny. 
Welcome, oh, welcome ! — Nay, a bell 
More solemn peals — farewell ! farewell ! *^ 



THE BLOTTED PAGE 

The Angel with the Book 

That holds each word and deed, 

On my page let me look ; 
And as I blushed to read, — 

" Three things," the Angel said, 
" I may blot out for thee." 
I bowed in thought my head — 
Now which ones should they be ? 

" Blot this ! " — " No, that ! " came quick. 
As still new conscience woke ; 
Till all the leaf was thick 

With blackening blur and stroke. 

" 'T were better as I live," 

I cried in my despair, 
" To blot the whole, and give 

A new page otherwheie ! " 



LIVING 

" To-day," I thought, " I will not plan nor strive ; 

Idle as yon blue sky, or clouds that go 

Like loitering ships, with sails as white as snow, 
I simply will be glad to be alive." 

For, year by year, in steady summer glow 
The flowers had bloomed, and life had stored its hive. 
But tasted not the honey. Quite to thrive, 

The flavor of my thrift I now would know. 
But the good breeze blew in a friend — a boon 

At any hour. There was a book to show, 
A gift to take, a slender one to give. 
The morning passed to mellow afternoon, 
And that to twilight; it was sleep-time soon, — 
And lo ! again I had forgot to live. 



BLINDFOLD 

What do we know of the world, as we grow so old 

and wise ? 
Do the years, that still the heart-beats, quicken the 

drowsy eyes ? 
At twenty we thought we knew it, — the world there, 

at our feet ; 
We thought we had found its bitter, we knew we had 

found its sweet. 
Now at forty and fifty, what do we make of the 

world ? 
There in her sand she crouches, the Sphinx with her 

gray wings furled. 
Soul of a man I know not ; who knoweth, can fore- 
tell. 
And what can I read of fate, even of self I have 

learned so well ? 
Heart of a woman I know not : how should I hope to 

know, 
I that am foiled by a flower, or the stars of the silent 

snow ; 
I that have never guessed the mind of the bright-eyed 

bird. 
Whom even the dull rocks cheat, and the whirlwind's 

awful word ? 



BLINDFOLD 383 

Let me loosen the fillet of day from the shut and 

darkened lid, 
For life is a blindfold game, and the Voice from view 

is hid. 
I face him as best I can, still groping, here and there. 
For the hand that has touched me lightly, the lips that 

have said, " Declare ! " 
Well, I declare him my friend, — the friend of the 

whole sad race ; 
And oh, that the game were over, and I might see his 

face ! 
But 't is much, though I grope in blindness, the Voice 

that is hid from view 
May be heard, may be even loved, in a dream that 

may come true. 



WIEGENLIED 

Be still and sleep, my soul ! 

Now gentle-footed Night, 
In softly shadowed stole, 

Holds all the day from sight. 

Why shouldst thou lie and stare 
Against the dark, and toss, 

And live again thy care, 
Thine agony and loss ? 

*T was given thee to live, 
And thou hast lived it all ; 

Let that suffice, nor give 

One thought what may befalL- 

Thou hast no need to wake. 

Thou art no sentinel ; 
Love all the care will take. 

And Wisdom watcheth well. 

Weep not, think not, but rest ! 

The stars in silence roll ; 
On the world's mother-breast. 

Be still and sleep, my soul ! 



SIBYLLINE BARTERING 

Fate, the gray Sibyl, with kind eyes above 

Closely locked lips, brought youth a merry crew 

Of proffered friends ; the price, self-slaying love. 
Proud youth repulsed them. She and they with- 
drew. 

Then she brought half the troop; the cost, the same. 

My man's heart wavered : should I take the few, 
And pay the whole ? But while I went and came. 

Fate had decided. She and they withdrew. 

Once more she came, with two. Now life's midday 
Left fewer hours before me. Lonelier grew 

The house and heart. But should the late purse pay 
The earlier price ? And she and they withdrew. 

At last I saw Age his forerunners send. 

Then came the Sibyl, still with kindly eyes 
And close-locked lips, and offered me one friend, — 

Thee, my one darling ! With what tears and cries 

I claimed and claim thee ; ready now to pay 
The perfect love that leaves no self to slay ! 



THE AGILE SONNETEER 

How facile 't is to frame the sonnet ! See : 

An " apt alliteration " at the stan ; 

Phrase fanciful, turned t'other-end-to with art ; 
And then a rhyme makes first and fourth agree. 
Ee words enough — so this next quatrain we 

Will therefore rhyme to match. Here sometimes 
" heart " 

Comes in, as " hot " or " throbbing " to impart 
A tang of sentiment to our idee. 
Then the sextette, wherein there strictly ought 

To be a kind of winding up of things ; 
Only two rhymes (to have it nicely wrought) 

On which it settles, lark-like, as it sings. 

And so 't is perfect, head and tail and wings. 
" Lacks something ? " Oh, as usual, but a thought. 



MOMENTOUS WORDS 

What spiteful chance steals unawares 

Wherever lovers come, 
And trips the nimblest brain and scares 

The bravest feelings dumb ? 

We had one minute at the gate, 

Before the others came ; 
To-morrow it would be too late, 

And whose would be the blame ! 

I gazed at her, she glanced at me ; 
Alas ! the time sped by : 
" How warm it is to-day ! " said she ; 
"It looks like rain," said I. 



THE CRICKETS IN THE FIELDS 

One, or a thousand voices ? — filling noon 
With such an undersong and drowsy chant 

As sings in ears that waken from a swoon, 

And know not yet which world such murmurs 

haunt : 
Single, then double beats, reiterant j 

Far off and near ; one ceaseless, changeless tune. 

If bird or breeze awake the dreamy will. 
We lose the song, as it had never been ; 

Then suddenly we find 't is singing still 

And had not ceased. — So, friend of mine, within 
My thoughts one underthought, beneath the din 

Of life, doth every quiet moment fill. 

Thv voice is far, thy face is hid from me. 

But day and night are full of dreams of thee. 



ALONE 

Still earth turns and pulses stir, 
And each day hath its deed ; 

But if I be dead to her, 
What is the hfe I lead ? 

Cares the cuckoo for the wood, 
When the red leaves are down ? 

Stays the robin near the brood. 

When they are fledged and flown i 

Yea, we live ; the common air 
To both its bounty brings. 

Mockery ! Can the absent share 
The half-forgotten things ? 

Barren comfort fancy doles 

To him that truly sees ; 
Sullen Earth can sever souls 

Far as the Pleiades. 

Take thy toys, stepmother Earth, — 
Take force of limb and brain ; 

All thy gifts are little worth. 
Till her I find again. 



390 ALONE 

Grass mav spring and buds mav stir, 
Why should mine eyes take heed ? 

For if I be dead to her, 
Then am J dead Indeed. 



BEFORE SUNRISE IN WINTER 

A PURPLE cloud hangs half-way down ; 

Sky, yellow gold below ; 
The naked trees, bevond the town. 

Like masts against it show — 

Bare masts and spars of our earth-ship. 
With shining snow-sails furled ; 

And through the sea of space we slip, 
That flows all round the world. 



ILLUSION 

Daixty Buttercup, mv bird, 

Dances at the mirror, stirred 

By an ecstasy of song j 

Tosses wing, pipes loud and long ; 

For this neu' mate, breast to breast, 

Seems of golden birds the best. 

Ah, mv foolish little love, 
Just such fantasy doth move 
Your sweet spirit, when you find 
Treasure in my heart or mind ; 
'T is not anvthing in me — 
*T is your image that you see ! 



THE POET'S POLITICAL ECONOMY 

The round earth bears him without pay, 
Heaven brings sweet air to breathe, 

Unto his brain each dying day 
Soft slumber doth bequeathe ; 

Clear water runs in the mountain stream, 

And sun gives glow, and star gives gleam. 

O tiller of the wheat-land, give — 
O miller by the brook-strand, give — 
O shepherd, of thy fleeces give 
The little that he needs to live. 

He will never do ye wrong. 
But pay in ringing gold of song. 



A SUBTLETY 

They were lovers when they wed. 

Now some slight he showed to her 
For another. Then she said, 

'' Has it come that vou prefer 

Other women's good to mine ? " 
" You and I are one," quoth he ; 
" 'T is self-sacrifice, in fine, 
To deny mv other Me." 

Silently she turns away, 

Hiding tears that almost come. 

In her heart I hear her sav, 
" Charity begins at home." 



THE DIFFERENCE 

In the morning the flowers blossomed 

All about my feet : 
I did not stop to pick them, 

I scarcely knew them sweet. 

Now in the dusky twilight 
Seeking with wistful care, 

Not many I discover, 
And very few are fair. 



A SONG IN THE AFTERNOON 

Come, and let 's grow old, 

And let 's grow old together ! 
Boyhood's heart was wondrous bold, 

And light as any feather. 
Rollicking and frolicking 

In every wind and weather ; 
But come now, let 's grow old, 

And let 's grow old together ! 

Come and let 's be leal 

And true to one another I 
Boys are fickle ; as they feel. 

So they do; love this and t'other; 
Borrowing or sorrowing 

With any man and brother ; 
But come now, let 's be leal 

And true to one another ! 

Come, and let 's be wise, 

And wag our heads sedately ! 

Cooler breezes clear the skies. 
And sight is lengthened greatly. 

Jolly days were folly days ; 
We dofF the motley lately. 



A SONG IN THE AFTERNOON 397 

So come now, let 's be wise, 
And wag our heads sedately ! 

Come then, and let 's grow old. 

So we grow old together ! 
Wits are thin o'er apple chin, 

Long beards give length of tether. 
Spring may yearn, and summer burn. 

Your fall 's the finest weather. 
So come now, let's grow old, 

And let 's grow old together ! 



A SUPPLICATION 

Mother, O fair earth-mother ! 

Let not the hand of any other 

Than thine own self, most wise and mild 

Take the life of thy child. 

Let not mine own folly, 

Or murderous melancholy 

Senseless and wild. 

Or the blow of a madman's arm. 

Do me that final harm. 

Let rather one of thy great cliffs that fall 

Bury me underneath its wall ; 

Or thine enormous sea 

Sweep over me. 

Whenever and however comes that day. 

Take thou my life away. 

So shall I seem to be a part 

Of all thou art; 

Mated with every noble natural form 

Of thine eternal power; 

A brother of the storm. 

One kindred with the mountain and the flower. 



SPACE 

Black, frost-cold distance, sparsely honeycombed 
With hollow shells of glimmering golden light ; 
Mere amber bubbles floating through the night. 
Lit by one centred sparkle, azure-domed, 
With circling motes where life hath lodged and 
roamed. 



ONE TOUCH OF NATURE 

Cruel and wild the battle: 

Great horses plunged and reared, 

And through dust-cloud and smoke-cloud, 

Blood-red with sunset's angry flush. 

You heard the gun-shots rattle, 

And, 'mid hoof-tramp and rush. 

The shrieks of women speared. 

For it was Russ and Turcoman, — 

No quarter asked or given ; 

A whirl of frenzied hate and death 

Across the desert driven. 

Look ! the half-naked horde gives way. 

Fleeing frantic without breath. 

Or hope, or will ; and on behind 

The troopers storm, in blood-thirst blind, 

While, like a dreadful fountain-play, 

The swords flash up, and fa'l, and slay — 

Wives, grandsires, baby brows and gray. 

Groan after groan, yell upon yell — 

Are men but fiends, and is eanh hell ? 

Nay, for out of the flight and fear 
Spurs a Russian cuirassier; 



ONE TOUCH OF NATURE 401 

In his arms a child he bears. 

Her little foot bleeds ; stern she stares 

Back at the ruin of her race. 

The small hurt creature sheds no tear, 

Nor utters cry ; but clinging still 

To this one arm that does not kill, 

She stares back with her baby face. 

Apart, fenced round with ruined gear. 
The hurrying horseman finds a space, 
Where, with face crouched upon her knee, 
A woman cowers. You see him stoop 
And reach the child down tenderly. 
Then dash away to join his troop. 

How came one pulse of pity there — 
One heart that would not slay, but save — 
In all that Christ-forgotten sight ? 
Was there, far north by Neva's wave. 
Some Russian girl in sleep-robes white. 
Making her peaceful evening prayer. 
That Heaven's great mercy 'neath its care 
Would keep and cover him to-night ? 



THE COUP DE GRACE 

If I were very sure 
That all was over betwixt you and me — 

That, while this endless absence I endure 
With but one mood, one dream, one misery 
Of waiting, you were happier to be free, — 

Then I might find again 
In cloud and stream and all the winds that blow, 

Yea, even in the faces of my fellow-men, 
The old companionship ; and I might know 
Once more the pulse of action, ere I go. 

But now I cannot rest. 
While this one pleading, querulous tone without 

Breaks in and mars the music in my breast. 
I open the closed door — lo ! all about. 
What seem your lingering footprints ; then I doubt. 

Waken me from this sleep ! 
Strike fearless, let the naked truth-edge gleam ! 

For while the beautiful old past I keep, 
I am a phantom, and all mortals seem 
But phantoms, and my life fades as a dream. 



APPRECIATED 

" Ah, could I but be understood ! " 
(I prayed the powers above), 

" Could but some spirit, bright and good, 
Know me, and, knowing, love ! " 

One summer's day there came to pass - 

A maid ; and it befell 
She spied and knew me : yea, alas ! 

She knew me all too well. 

Gray were the eyes of Rosamund, 

And I could see them see 
Through and through me, and beyond, 

And care no more for me. 



ROLAND 

A FOOLISH creature full of fears, 

He trembled for his fate, 
And stood aghast to feel the earth 

Swing round her dizzy freight. 

With timid foot he touched each plan. 
Sure that each plan would fail ; 

Behemoth's tread was his, it seemed, 
And every bridge too frail. 

No glory of the night or day 

Lit any crown for him. 
The tranquil past but breathed a mist 

To make the future dim. 

The world, his birthright, seemed a cell, 

An iron heritage ; 
Man, a trapped creature, left to die 

Forgotten in his cage. 

In every dark he held his breath 

And warded off a blow ; 
While at his shoulder still he sought 

Some tagging ghost of woe. 



ROLAND 405 

Spying the thorns but not the flowers, 
Through all the blossoming land 

He hugged his careful heart and shunned 
The path on either hand. 

The buds that broke their hearts to give 

New odors to the air 
He saw not ; but he caught the scent 

Of dead leaves everywhere. 

Till on a day he came to know 

He had not made the world ; 
That if he slept, as when he ran. 

Each onward planet whirled. 

He knew not where the vision fell. 

Only all things grew plain — 
As if some thatch broke through and let 

A sunbeam cross his brain. 

In beauty flushed the morning light, 
With blessing dropped the rain. 

All creatures were to him most fair, 
Nor anything in vain. 

He breathed the space that links the stars. 

He rested on God's arm — 
A man unmoved by accident, 

Untouched by any harm. 



4o6 ROLAND 

The weary doubt if all is good, 
The doubt if all is ill, 

He left to Him who leaves to us 
To know that all is well. 



CLOUD tRACERY 

What wind from what celestial wood hath sown 
Such delicate seed as springs in air, and turns 
The blue heaven-garden to a bed of ferns 
In feathery cloud ? They are not tossed, or blown 

To such wild shapes, but motionless they ride. 
Like a celestial frost-work on the pane 
Of our sky-window, where the breath has lain 
Of the pure cold upon the thither side. 

They are but pencil touches, soft and light, 
Traced faintly under some magnetic spell 
By an entranced spirit, that would write 

Hints of heaven-language ere the soul's release, — 

Dim outlines of the syllables that tell 

Of words like faith, and confidence, and peace. 



THE LIFE NATURAL 

Overhead the leaf-song, on the upland slope ; 
Over that the azure, clean from base to cope ; 
Belle the mare beside me, drowsy from her lope. 

Goldy-green the wheat-field, like a fluted wall 
In the pleasant wind, with waves that rise and fall, 
" Moving all together," if it " move at all." 

Shakespeare in my pocket, lest I feel alone, 
Lest the brooding landscape take a sombre tone ; 
Good to have a poet to fall back upon ! 

But the vivid beauty makes the book absurd : 
What beside the real world is the written word ? 
Keep the page till winter, when no thrush is heard ! 

Why read Hamlet here ? — what 's Hecuba to me ? 
Let me read the grain-field ; let me read the tree ; 
Let me read mine own heart, deep as I can see. 



TO THE UNKNOWN SOUL 

SOUL, that somewhere art my very kin, 
From dusk and silence unto thee I call ! 

1 know not where thou dwellest : if within 

A palace or a hut ; if great or small 
Thy state and store of fortune ; if thou 'rt sad 
This moment, or most glad ; 

The lordliest monarch or the lowest thrall. 

But well I know — since thou 'rt my counterpart - 
Thou bear'st a clouded spirit ; full of doubt 

And old misgiving, heaviness of heart 

And loneliness of mind ; long wearied out 

With climbing stairs that lead to nothmg sure, 

With chasing lights that lure. 

In the thick murk that wraps us all about. 

As across many instruments a flute 

Breathes low, and only thrills its selfsame tone. 
That wakes in music while the rest are mute. 

So send thy voice to me ! Then I alone 
Shall hear and answer ; and we two will fare 
Together, and each bear 

Twin burdens, lighter now than either one. 



REPROOF IN LOVE 

Because we are shut out from light, 
Each of the other's look and smile ; 

Because the arms' and lips' delight 
Are past and dead, a weary while ; 

Because the dawn, that joy has brought, 
Brings now but certainty of pain. 

Nothing for you and me has bought 
The right to live our lives in vain. 

Take not away the only lure 

That leads me on my lonely way. 

To know you noble, sweet, and pure, 
Great in least service, day by day. 



EVEN THERE 

A TROOP of babes in Summer Land, 
At heaven's gate — the children's gate : 

One lifts the latch with rosy hand, 

Then turns and, dimpling, asks her mate, — - 

" What was the last thing that you saw ? " 
" I lay and watched the dawn begin. 
And suddenly, through the thatch of straw, 
A great, clear morning star laughed in." 

'' And you ? " " A floating thistle-down. 

Against June sky and cloud-wings white." 

" And you ? " " A falling blow, a frown — 
It frights me yet ; oh, clasp me tight ! " 

" And you ? " " A face through tears that smiled " — 
The trembling lips could speak no more ; 
The blue eyes swam ; the lonely child 
Was homesick even at heaven's door. 



ON SECOND THOUGHT 

The end 's so near, 

It is all one 
What track I steer, 

What work 's begun. 

It is all one 

If nothing 's done, 
The end 's so near ! 

The end 's so near, 
It is all one 

What track thou steer. 
What work 's begun — 
Some deed, some plan. 
As thou 'rt a man ! 

The end 's so near ! 



INDEXES 



INDEX OF FIRST LINES 



A FOOLISH creature full of fears, 404. 
A fountain rusheth upward from 

God's throne, 43. 
After sleep, the waking, 196. 
A group of artists of the olden time, 

3°- 
"Ah, could I but be understood ! " 

403. 
A life — a common, cleanly, quiet 

life, 74. 
All alone — alone, 28. 
All night, beneath the flashing 

hosts of stars, 282. 
All summer let me lie along the 

grass, 352. 
All the skies had gloomed in gray, 

373 
A maid upon the lonely beach, 12 
Am 1 not weary of them as your 

heart, 350. 
A month since I last laid my pencil 

down, 94. 
A moonlit desert's yellow sands, 334. 
A purple cloud hangs half way 

down, 391. 
A sea of shade ; with hollow heights 

above, 272. 
A sea of splendor in the West, 

109 
As in the Spring, ere any flowers 

have come, 37. 
A small, swift planet, glimmering 

round a star, 52. 
As one who reads a tale writ in a 

tongue, 349. 



As some poor child whose soul is 

windowless, 242. 
As some poor Indian woman, 243. 
As through the noon the reapers 

rest, 49. 
At the North, far away, I. 
At the punch-bowl's brink, 320. 
A thunder-storm of the olden days 

287 
A tide of sun and song in beauty 

broke, 214, 
A tiny, blue-eyed, elfin lass, 149. 
A troop of babes in Summer Land, 

411. 
" Away ! Let not mine eyes, my 

heart, behold you ! " 356. 
A wilderness, made awful with the 

night, 71. 

Because we are shut out from light, 

410. 
Before the monstrous wrong he sets 

him down, 311. 
Be still and sleep, my soul, 384. 
Be true to me ! For there will dawn 

a day, 365. 
Black, frost-cold distance, sparsely 

honeycombed, 399. 
Black the storming ocean, crests that 

leap and whelm, 368. 
Blindest and most frantic prayer, 

286. 
Born of the shadows that it passes 

through, 201. 
Brook, be still, — be still ! 73. 



4i6 



INDEX OF FIRST LINES 



Bury it, and sift, 129. 
By the wild fence-row, all grown up, 
297. 

Can this be Christmas — sweet as 

May, 236. 
Clear water on smooth rock, 1 34. 
Cold — cold — the very sun looks 

cold, 117. 
Come, and let 's grow old, 396. 
Couched on the turf, and lying mute 

and still, 353. 
Cruel and wild the battle, 400. 

Dainty Buttercup, my bird, 392. 
Dawn has blossomed : the sun is 

nigh, 348. 
Dead ! And the echoes dumb, 265. 
Dear friends, ask not from me a 

song, 262. 
Does a man ever give up hope, I 

wonder, 325. 
Doubting Thomas and loving John, 

234. 
Doubtless the linnet, shut within its 

cage, 44. 
Down in its crystal hollow, 357. 
Dumb and still was the heart of man, 

240. 

Every house with its garret, 151. 

Farewell to such a world ! Too long 

I press, 341. 
Far in hollow mountain cafions, 

142. 
Fate, the gray Sibyl, with kind eyes 

above, 385. 
Father in Heaven ! humbly before 

thee, 153. 
Five mites of monads dwelt in a 

round drop, 224. 



Forenoon and afternoon and night — 
Forenoon, 133. 

Four years ! 18. 

Fret not that the day is gone, 327. 

From all the long, bright daytime's 
restlessness, 249. 

From Athens, Rome, and Asia, 375. 

From the scarlet sea of sunset, 147. 

From the warm garden in the sum- 
mer night, 367. 

Go, minister of God, 182. 
Growing old, and looking back, 371. 

Haste, haste, O laggard — leave thy 

drowsy dreams ! 66. 
Has, then, our boyhood vanished, 

315- 
He died at night. Next day they 

came, 347, 
Here at last to part — the darkness 

lying, 20. 
Hid in the silence of a forest deep, 

/S5- 
His wheel of logic whirled and spun 

all day, 370. 
Holding apoise in air, 244. 
Hope builded herself a palace, 204. 
How facile 't is to frame the sonnet ! 

See, 386. 
How the dull thought smites me 

dumb, 340. 
Hushed within her quiet bed, 1 1 9. 

I blow the organ at St. Timothy's, 

179. 
I entered once, at break of day, 3, 
If I were very sure, 402. 
If quiet autumn mornings would not 

come, 323. 
If there is naught but wliat we see, 



INDEX OF FIRST LINES 



417 



I Iknow a spot beneath three ancient 
trees, 67. 

I know the splendor of the Sun, 
136. 

I lay awake and listened, ere the 
light, 344 

I looked across the lawn one sum- 
mer's day, 326. 

I looked in a dew-drop's heart to- 
day, 114. 

I never know why 't is 1 love thee 
so, 274. 

In the deep night a little bird, 324. 

In the morning the flowers blos- 
somed, 395. 

I said, "Blue heaven" (Oh, it 
was beautiful ! ), 178 

I stood in sombre dreaming, 345. 

It comes upon me in the woods, 
193. 

It is no harmony of human making, 
127. 

It is not death I mean, 312. 

It was ever so many years ago, 
162. 

I waited in the little sunny room, 
3H- 

June's sunshine on the broad porch 

shines, 146. 
Just where the street of the village 

ends, no. 

Lend me thy fillet. Love ! 309. 
Let us return once more, we said, 

278. 
" Love me, or I am slain ! " I cried, 

and meant, 310. 

Mornings were there, richer than of 

Eastern story, 19. 
Mother, O fair earth-mother! 398. 



My peace thou art, thou art my 

rest, 355. 
My tower was grimly builded, 227. 

Night in the woods, — night, 369. 
Not a dread cavern, hoar with damp 

and mould, 232. 
Not all which we have been, 22. 

O Forest-Mother, I have stayed, 
250, 

Often when the night is come, 321. 

O God, our Father, if we had but 
truth, 145. 

O hours of Yale — vanished hours ! 
18. 

Oh that one could arise and flee, 26. 

Once he cried to all the hills and 
waters, 253. 

Once, in a dream, in a bleak, sea- 
blown land, 192. 

One morning, in a Prince's park, 39. 

One morning of a summer's day, 

One, or a thousand voices? — filling 
noon, 388. 

Only so much of power each day, 70. 

O soul, that somewhere art my very 
kin, 409. 

Overhead the leaf-song, on the up- 
land slope, 408. 

'* O world, O glorious world, good- 
by! "245. 

Poor wretch ! that smites, in his 
despair insane, 354. 

Send down thy truth, O God ! 159. 
" Sent out, was I, to turn the sod ? " 

186. 
Silly bird ! 332. 
Singing in the rain, robin? 124. 



4i8 



INDEX OF FIRST LINES 



Sing me, thou Singer, a song of 

gold! 135. 
Sky in its lucent splendor lifted, 

154. 
Slender spars and snowy wings, 258. 
So you have wondered at me, — 

guessed in vain, 364. 
Still earth turns and pulses stir, 

389. 

The Angel with the Book, 380. 
The bliss that happy lovers dream 

will bloom, 353. 
The brave old motto," Seem not — 

only be," 138. 
The cold, hard sky and hidden sun, 

122. 
The end 's so near, 412. 
The green was all with shadows 

blent, 267. 
The letter came at last I carried it, 

323. 
The little rim of moon hangs low — 

the room, 9. 
The marble-smith, at his morning 

task, 248 
The pleasant path of youth that we 

have ranged, 23 
There fell a vision to Praxiteles, 

290. 
The round earth bears him without 

pay. 393- 
The royal feast was done ; the King, 

275. 
The shadow of a bird, 148. 
The " sobbing wind," the " weeping 

rain," 3 1 8. 
The stars know a secret, 360. 
The star, so pure in saintly white, 

219. 
The Sun is gone : those glorious 

chariot wheels, 125. ; 



The thrush sings high on the to[>- 

most bough, 247. 
The tree-top, high above the barren 

field, 8. 
The world runs round, 336. 
They think me daft, who nightly 

meet, 120. 
They were lovers when they wed, 

394- 
This 1 beheld, or dreamed it in a 

dream, 277. 
This is not winter : where is the crisp 

air, 307. 
Thou pitiless, false sea ! 140. 
'T is just the day to hear good news, 

229. 
'T is not in seeking, 233. 
" To-day," I thought, " I will not 

plan nor strive," 381. 
To the mother of the world, 202. 
Truth cut on high in tablets of hewn 

stone, 144. 
'T was Sabbath ; and, with clang on 

clang, 160. 
Two craggy slopes, sheer down on 

either hand, 328. 
Two souls, whose bodies sate them 

on a hill, 222. 

Under a fragrant blossom-bell, 33. 
Under the stars, across whose patient 

eyes, 5. 
Upon the barren, lonely hill, 131. 

Walk who will at deep of noon, 

366. 
Was there last night a snowstorm ? 

Ill, 
We are living a game of chess, dear 

May, 50. 
Weary, and marred with care and 

pain, 190. 



INDEX OF FIRST LINES 



419 



Well, the world is before us, — let 

us go forth and live, 23. 
Were it not horrible ? 27. 
Were there no crowns on earth, 

61. 
We sailed a cruise on a summer sea, 

16." 
What am I glad will stay when I have 

passed, 216. 
What cared she for the free hearts ? 

She would comfort, 176. 
What do we know of the world, as 

we grow so old and wise ? 382. 
What if some morning, when the 

stars were paling, 346. 
What is the truth to believe, 362. 
What may we take into the vast 

Forever ? 58. 
What need have 1 to fear — so soon 

to die ? 331. 



What spiteful chance steals unawares, 

387. 
What were the garden-bowers of 

Thebes to me ? 46. 
What wind from what celestial wood 

hath sown, 407. 
When is it Spring ? When spirits rise, 

188. 
When 1 was yet but a child, the 

gardener gave me a tree, 284. 
When the low music makes a dusk 

of sound, 246, 
Whether *t was in that dome of even- 
ing sky, 221. 
White in her snowy stone, and cold, 

322. 
Why need I seek some burden small 

to bear, 212. 

Yes, I know what you say, 359. 



INDEX OF TITLES 



An AGE from the Orient, An, 310. 

Agile Sonneteer, The, 3S6. 

Alone, 3S9, 

Among the Redwoods, 341. 

Ancient Ermr, An, 318. 

Anna, To Child, 37. 

Answer, An, 262. 

Appreciated, 403. 

April in Oakland, III. 

Arch, The, 1 10. 

Aspiration, An, 278. 

Ac Dawn, 344, 

At Early Mom, 366. 

At Last, 249. 

Before Sunrise in Winter, 39 1. 
Bellows-Boy, The. 179. 
Bird in Winter, A Dead, laa. 
Bird, The Lost, 1-6. 
Bird's Song, A, 14S. 
Blindfold, 3S2. 
Blotted Page, The, 380. 
Book of Hours, The, 349. 
But for Him, 240 

Calitbmian's Dreams, A, 287. 

California Winter, 30". 

Carpe Diem, 340. 

Child and a Star, A, 219. 

Choice, The, "o 

Christmas in California, 236. 

Class Song, 1S64, 49. 

Clocks of Gnoster-Town, The, 

162. 
Cloud, A Drifting, aoi. 



Cloud. The, 353 

Cloud Tracerv, 40-. 

Commencement Poem, 18. 

Coup de Grace, The, 402. 

Creation, The, 43. 

Crickets in the Fields, The, 388. 

Daily Miracle, A, 146. 

Dare You ? 234. 

Dead Bird in Winter, A, 122. 

Dead Letter, The, 323. 

Dead President, The, 61. 

Departure of the Pilot, The, 258. 

Deserter, The, 2S6 

Desire of Sleep, 31a. 

Despair and Hope, 16. 

DirFerence, The, 395 

Discontent, 26. 

Dream-Doomed, 12. 

Dream within a Dream, A, 267. 

Drifting Cloud, A, 201. 

Eastern Winter, 117. 
Even There, 411. 
Evening, 125. 
Every-day Life, 248^ 
Eve's Daughter, 314. 

Fable, A, 39. 

Face at a Concert, To a, 246. 

Faith, S. 

Fertility, 134. 

Field Notes, 29''. 

First Cause, The, 44. 

Five Lives, 224. 



INDEX OF TITLES 



421 



Foolish Wish, A, zi2. 

Fool's Prayer, The, 275. 

Force, 360. 

Forest Home, 250. 

For the Gifts of the Spirit, 159. 

Foster-Mother, The, 240. 

Fountain, The, 27, 

Four Pictures, The, 30. 

Four Sonnets from Sully Prud- 

homme, 352. 
Fultillment, 373. 
Future, The, 5S. 

Game of Life, The, 50. 

Gifts of the Spirit, For the, 159. 

Good News, 229. 

Her Explanation, 364. 

Her Face, 345. 

Hermione, 322. 

Hermitage, and Other Poems, 

The, 74 
Hermitage, The, 74. 
His Lost Day, 371. 
His Neighbor as Himself, 368. 
Home, 67. 

House and the Heart, The, 151, 
Hymn of Hope, A, 315. 

Illusion, 392. 

In a Far Country, 192. 

Infirmity, 362. 

Influences, 147. 

Influences, 323. 

In Memory of a Musician, 265. 

In Separation, 353. 

Invisible, The, 198. 

Is it Safe i" 222. 

L' Amour Assassine, 354. 
Later Poems, 346. 
Life, 133. 



Life, The Game of, 50. 

Life Natural, The, 408. 

Links of Chance, The, 244. 

Living, 381. 

Lost Bird, The, 176. 

Lost Love, 129. 

Lost Magic, The, 322. 

Lover's Song, The, 309. 

Maid Demure, To a, 321. 
Man, the Spirit, 52. 
Memory, A, I 3 I. 
Midnight, 5. 

Mir aus den Augen, 356. 
Momentous Words, 387. 
Moods, 348. 
Morning, 3. 

Morning Thought, A, 346. 
Music, 9. 

My Peace thou art, 355. 
Mystery, The, 274. 
Myth of Fantasy and First Love, A, 
155- 

Nature and her Child, 242. 
News-Girl, The, 149. 
New Year, The, 1 8 a. 
Night and Peace, 369. 
North Wind, The, 282. 

On a Picture of Mt. Shasta by Keith, 

328. 
One Touch of Nature, 400. 
On Second Thought, 412. 
Open Window, The, 227 
Opportunity, 277. 
Oracle, The, 357. 
Organ, The, 127. 

Paradox, A, 66. 
Peace, 233. 
Philosopher, The, 370. 



422 



INDEX OF TITLES 



Picture of the World, The, 157. 
Poems Written between 1862 

AND 1867, 33. 
Poems Written between 1867 

AND 1872, 148. 
Poems Written between 1872 

AND 1880, 216. 
Poet's Apology, A, 144. 
Poet's Political Economy, The, 393. 
Polar Sea, The, I. 
Prayer, A, 145. 
Prayer for Peace, A, 153, 
President, The Dead, 61. 

«* Quern Metui Moritura ? " 331. 

Recall, 310. 

Reformer, The, 31 1. 

Reply, A, 202. 

Reproof in Love, 410. 

Resting-Place, A, 272. 

Retrospect, 22. 

Return to Arcadia, The, 375. 

Reverie, 221 . 

Roland, 404. 

Ruby Heart, The, 33. 

Sara, To Child, 114. 

Schoolhouse Windows, The, 204. 

Secret, The, 214. 

Seeming and Being, 138. 

Semele, 46. 

Serenity, 73. 

Service, 327. 

Sibylline Bartering, 385. 

Siesta, 352. 

Singer, The, 332. 

Singer's Confession, The, 253. 

Sleeping, 119. 

Solitude, 28. 

Song in the Afternoon, A, 396. 



Song in the Night, The, 31^ 

Space, 399. 

Spring, 1S8. 

Spring Twilight, 124. 

Starlight, 120. 

Strange, 347. 

Subtlety, A, 394. 

Summer Afternoon, 142. 

Summer Night, 367. 

Summer Rain, 178. 

Sunday, 232. 

Sundown, 109. 

Supplication, A, 398. 

Tempted, 359. 

Things that will not Die, The, 216. 

Three Songs, I 35. 

Thrush, The, 247. 

To a Face at a Concert, 246. 

To a Maid Demure, 321. 

To Child Anna, 37. 

To Child Sara, 114. 

To "The Radical," 196. 

To the Unknown Soul, 409. 

Tranquillity, 190. 

Translations, 352. 

Tree of my Life, The, 284. 

Tropical Morning at Sea, A, 154. 

Truant, The, 1S6. 

Truth at Last, 325. 

Two Views of It, 245. 

Two Ways, The, 160. 

UNDERGRAtJATE AND EaRLY PoEMS, 
I. 

Unknown Soul, To the, 409. 
Untimely Thought, 326. 

Venus of Milo, The, and Other 

Poems, 290. 
Venus of Milo, The, 290. 



INDEX OF TITLES. 



423 



Warning, 365. 
Weather-Bound, 140. 
Wiegenlied, 384. 
Wisdom and Fame, 71. 
Wish, A Foolish, 212. 



Wonderful Thought, The, 193. 
"Words, Words, Words," 350. 
Wordsworth, 334. 
World runs Round, The, 336. 
World's Secret, The, 136. 



3I|.77-9 



vj 



